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Variety of challenges puts Tregaon
on par with other links-style courses
The setting of
Tregaron Golf Club includes rolling hills, some soft sand bunkers, and
assorted
water challenges. The course looks sharp from most
views, but primarily at sunrise and sunset, when the undulations cast
ominous shadows on the Bellevue course.
Tregaron
boasts itself as “Your country club for a day.” It isn’t far off, except
in price: $25 for 18 holes and a cart. The variety between the holes
keeps the course fresh, and the use of water
and rolling terrain on this links style course make
for some great golf.
That the course
contains a little bit of everything adds to the country club feel. Most
often, you’ll find bunkers waiting near the landing areas of your tee
shots, and few more guarding the green. Water comes into play on nine
holes, including No. 7, where it’s easily visible and affects the second
shot and your approach to the green.
Many of the
bunkers are a soft, white sand and the front edges are steep, meaning
placing a shot in the trap could equal a one-stroke penalty just to get
it out. (Other bunkers are flat and not as good looking.)
You’ll face
several severe changes in elevation, whether it’s teeing off down a long
slope or hitting upwards to a hidden, elevated green.
And the greens.
Can’t forget the greens at Tregaron. Catch a side hill slope and a
three-putt is waiting to nab you. The greens are lightning-quick, so
adjust early, and it’s imperative your approach shots miss below the
hole.
A closer look
Tregaron’s
No. 1 is a great tune-up: Downhill tee shot, dogleg left, two-tiered
green. Handle it well and you’ll feel you’re off to a confident start.
No. 2 features
major water, but you’ll be able to choose the angle and distance at
which you carry the hazard. No. 3 and 4 are straight, but the sloping of
the fairways and greens keep you honest.
No. 5 is a par 3
with water to carry.
No. 7 is one of
the true challenges in the metro area. It’s a 571-yard par 5 that
features three sand traps in the landing area. The second shot usually
takes you toward a two-tiered fairway and hopefully away from the large
water hazard on the left. If you’ve set your ball to the right side of
the fairway, the water
really won’t come into play, but the large,
sloping green is extremely tricky. It slopes toward a bunker and the
water, but land it on the green, and you will be safe.
Another par 3 at
No. 8, where a large bunker hangs on the entire right side of the green.
No. 9 is nearly a 90-degree dogleg to the left. Bunkers guard the
landing area, which sits well below the raised green. It’s tough to
judge the pin placement, but if you land your approach on the back side,
it’s a slippery slope coming back.
No. 11 is a
deep-dropping par 4 that introduces you to some of the woods that guard
parts of Tregaron’s back 9. A large tree looms on the right side of the
fairway, requiring some placement off the tee.
No. 12 (a par 3)
and No. 13 (a shorter par 4) use the same pond to force placement off
the tee, and No. 14 is another large test Tregaron offers. The par 5
curves around a long lake, and if the rough has been recently mowed,
your ball can easily roll into the hazard. It’s another terrific
hole.
No.
17 can be brutal if your tee shot isn’t safe. The tees sit back in the
forest, and the hole is uphill for at least half of the 538 yards. To
reach the green in two, you’ll have to maneuver several sand traps and
elevation changes that cover the front edge. On in three is a nice feat.
No. 18 is a great
finishing hole: uphill, wide open other than a few bunkers, generally
forgiving and featuring an approach shot towards an elevated green. |