Categories
Northern Arizona Payson

Rim Golf Club

AZGA Arizona Golf Buzz: Window shopping became a lot more fun for golfers with news in 2009 that The Rim Club, which opened as an exclusive private club in 1999, had opened for public play. Before then, it was like looking at the diamond ring in the jewelry store window that you could never wear. Now, everyone can try on this gem that features breathtaking views of the sprawling Mogollon Rim.

Hole #13 at The Rim Club in Payson, Arizona
Hole #13 The Rim Club

The Rim Club is the last of the 28 courses designed jointly by Jay Morrish and Tom Weiskopf, and it clearly demonstrates why they were such a formidable team; they just might have saved their best for last. Both have a knack for routing courses that blend perfectly with nature and there is plenty of nature to enjoy in this enclave that spans 555 acres in the midst of the largest continuous stand of Ponderosa pine in the United States. Unlike the craggy desert landscape you’ll find at most of Arizona’s top courses, this one more closely resembles the endless pine forests of the Rocky Mountains, blended with boulder outcroppings, dramatic elevation changes and dramatic views of the Mogollon Rim, a mountain plateau that extends for 200 miles and would be the state’s defining landmark if not for that little wonder known as the Grand Canyon.

It’s about 75 miles and a gorgeous +4,000-foot climb from Scottsdale to reach the Rim Club, which sits at an elevation over 5,000 feet. The Rim Club emerged from the bankruptcy filed by its developer, Crescent Resources, in December 2010, transferring club property to the member-owned club, and they elected to continue allowing public play on Fridays and Saturdays. Those who take advantage are treated to an uncommon golf experience combining the beauty of the 3-million-acre Tonto National Forest, exceptional service, elegant facilities and a brilliantly designed course.

Several holes at the Rim Club are worthy of signature status, but No.13 has received that designation. The downhill par-5 plays at 581 yards from the back tees with a left dogleg and plenty of trouble on the right. To reach the green in two shots, the second must clear a large boulder and carry about 260 yards to a green backdropped by a small mountain of elephant rocks.

Other memorable holes include the second, an uphill par-4 at 476 yards with a dogleg left to an uphill green; the seventh, a downhill par-4 at 467 yards with a lake on the left and a creek running to the right of the green; and the 11th a 476-yard uphill par-4 with a forced carry over a natural area from the tee to a plateau. Play those three in 3-over or better and you have three reasons to celebrate.

Along with the tough tests, Morrish and Weiskopf also created a few birdie holes and risk-reward holes which add fun to the experience, such as the 16th, a par-4 where a driver off the tee will leave about an 80-yard shot to the green but you need to place the ball in a fairway that narrows to about 20 yards wide in the landing area. With a 3-wood, there’s plenty of room, but that leaves a long or mid-iron shot to the green.  The par-71 layout plays at 7,040 yards from the back tees (5,184 from the front) and the scorecard gives you a hint of what you’re facing with hole names such as The Quarry, Balancing Rock, Ironwood Wash, Hell Bunker, The Saddle and Post Card. That last one could apply to many holes on this beauty.

If you’re not fortunate enough to be one of the window shoppers who made The Rim Club their home, the town of Payson offers several hotel and restaurant options. One of the best is Fargo’s Steak House, about five minutes from the course. If you have a little more time to spend, Christopher Creek Lodge is about as comfortable and charming as any place you will find in the high country and Creekside Steakhouse and Tavern is a mouth-watering experience. Its ribs and homemade desserts will keep you coming back for more, just like the golf course.

Categories
Lake Havasu City Northern Arizona

Refuge Golf Club

Arizona Golf Courses – Refuge Golf Club

Arizona Golf Courses List - Refuge Golf Club - Arizona Golf Authority
Refuge Golf Club 166-Yard Par-3 6th Hole

The struggling economy has slowed development of this Lake Havasu City country club project, located less than a mile north of the city limits, but the golf course and its amenities are in full swing after the tweaking of a Signature golf course originally designed by Arnold Palmer in 2004.

The Refuge, a private club built adjacent to the Havasu National Wildlife Refuge, hence its name, is situated alongside the Colorado River and Lake Havasu, offering up excellent views of both, along with surrounding mountain ranges and desert vistas. Bighorn sheep and many species of wild animals find refuge in the 20-mile long Topock Gorge that stretches through the preserve along the lower Colorado River, drawing thousands of visitors each year.

Golfers find their refuge on The Refuge course, which is defined by undulating terrain across all 18 holes, attractive hazards that bring water into play on five holes, and picturesque backdrops. The par-72 championship caliber course is a thorough exam from any of its four sets of tees, ranging from 4,844 to 7,083 yards all the way back.

The front nine is the more interesting of the two with water in play at five of the first eight holes. The signature hole is the sixth, a 166-yard par 3 with a steep drop from tee to green. Your tee ball must carry a pond here, the much larger Lake Havasu serves as the backdrop in the distance.

If you can complete the final three-hole stretch in even par, you deserve a pat on the back and a couple “cold ones” from your compatriots. No. 16 is a sweeping dogleg right par 5 of 574 yards to a well-bunkered green. No. 17 is a short par 3 at 132 yards but the green is virtually surrounded by large, deep bunkers. The finishing hole is a par 4 that stretches to 485 yards from the back tee, with a large bunker fronting the green and a smaller pot bunker behind.

This is a private club that offers several golf and non-golf memberships, and has a member-for-a-day option to introduce the facilities to prospective members. It has full practice facilities with a driving range, chipping and putting greens and a practice bunker.

The clubhouse includes a bar and grille and a full-service restaurant, swimming pool with pool bar, a spa and fitness facility.

Read the Arizona Golf Course Guide List Directory Review for every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

It’s “All Things Arizona Golf” from the Arizona Golf Authority.

Categories
Dewey Northern Arizona

Quailwood Greens Golf Course

Arizona Golf Authority AZGA Golf Course Buzz: Quailwood Greens golf course, located just east of Prescott in Dewey, Arizona is considered one of the best value plays in the area. It’s shorter than most championship layouts but offers up a lot more kick than an executive course with three par-5 holes and six par 3s.

Quailwood Greens, which opened in 1990, is a links-style layout that is nestled between the picturesque Mingus and Bradshaw Mountains. The layout features rolling fairways lined with mature trees, grass bunkers and moguls; water is a threat on just two holes.

Men’s tees are set at 5,800 and 5,120 yards and play at par 67, and women’s tees, with par 68, play at 4,711 yards. From the tips, the course is rated at 64.1 with a slope of 109.

The greens here are large and slick, elevated and provide plenty of undulation. One of the highlights of the front nine is the eighth hole, a 358-yard par-4 with a dogleg left that requires an approach shot over a lake to a bunkered green. On the back, the 11th hole, a 165-yard par-3, requires a tee shot over a lake to reach the green.

The layout is bookended by a pair of contrasting holes. No. 1, which offers up a birdie opportunity to start the round, is a par-5 playing at just 458 yards, while the 18th hole, longest par-4 on the course at 460 yards, makes for a tough par finish.

Quailwood has full practice facilities with a driving range, putting and chipping greens, as well as a full-service sports bar and grill where players relax after the last putt drops.

Read the Arizona Golf Course Review for every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory/.

It’s “All Things Arizona Golf” from the Arizona Golf Authority.

Categories
Northern Arizona Prescott

Prescott Lakes Golf & Country Club

The Buzz: Winding gracefully through the high desert, just north of Prescott, this was one of the early design efforts of Hale Irwin, but it doesn’t look and play like the work of some rookie. The three-time U.S. Open champion took full advantage of a pristine piece of property, creating holes that offer strategic challenge and, at more than a mile high in elevation, incorporate remarkable vistas that include San Francisco Peaks, Granite Dells, Mingus Mountain, Thumb Butte and Watson Lake Park. Antelope are plentiful in this region and it’s not unusual to see them grazing near fairways.

The private course is a centerpiece of the Prescott Lakes master-planned development, managed by Arnold Palmer Golf Management and has a temporary clubhouse. From the waterfall that greet you at the course entrance to the series of waterfalls alongside the finishing hole, this course provides a delightful golf experience with its variety of holes and special touches, like the covered bridges over waterways and its many petroglyphs.

These rock engravings, left behind by ancient cultures, were unearthed during construction and preserved, with some now serving as tee markers and others scattered around the property. There are six sets of tees, all named after wildlife such as Black Bear and Coyote, that range from 4,724 to 7,216 yards, with a rating of 73.4 and slope of 140 from the back tees.

Due to elevation, this layout tends to play a little shorter than the yardage suggests. Ask six guys to pick their favorite hole and you might get six answers because there are so many good ones. Among them is No. 2, a classic risk-reward par 4 at 330 yards with a lake running along the left side, an arroyo along the right and a strategic bunker near the center of the fairway that messes with your layup-club selection.

The par-5 eighth, the longest hole on the course at 601 yards from the tips, essentially has two island fairways and an island green. It starts with an elevated tee offering excellent views of Granite Dells and Vista Park. A rugged arroyo crosses the fairway twice, dividing it into two sections and separating it from the green, and the first section of fairway narrows as it goes, putting a greater premium on accuracy if you hit a driver. The hole doglegs slightly toward the green on the right, where a long ribbon-like bunker spreads along the right side and wraps around the back. Three more bunkers guard the left side. Tee to green, this is one of Arizona’s best strategic golf holes.

Strategy also comes into play on No. 14, a 402-yard par 4 with a dogleg right that offers a wide-open fairway along the left side. A tee shot along the right side will cut off significant yardage, but there is only a sliver of fairway available and a water hazard cuts in along the right edge of a hole built on a massive hill that slopes right its entire length.

No. 18, a 537-yard par 5, is the signature hole, called “Snake,” and it is another beauty. The dogleg left features a series of small lakes that empty into one another via waterfalls and run along the entire right side, then wrap around the back of the green. A series of bunkers also guard the right of a green that is elevated, adding to the risk-reward element on the approach.

After the round, plenty of fun awaits a few miles to the south in downtown Prescott at its famed “Whiskey Row,” a full block of Old West-style saloons and honkytonks, where cowboys gathered many decades ago to wet their whistles. If you prefer to whet your appetite, The Rose Restaurant on Cortez Street, which was built as a Victorian cottage in 1899, is as good as any dining establishment you will find in this historic town.

Categories
Dewey Northern Arizona

Prescott Country Club

Arizona Golf Authority AZGA Golf Course Buzz: Many Arizona golfers are “digging” for a well-designed golf course in a panoramic setting that’s open to the public, affordable and equipped with country club amenities.

They strike gold when they find Prescott Golf and Country Club, a classic-style golf course that provides a great golf experience for members and daily-fee golfers alike. Located just east of Prescott, in Dewey, Arizona, this golf course is a routine 90-minute road-trip for Scottsdale and Phoenix players escaping the summer heat in the Valley of the Sun.

Designed by Milt Coggins, a legend in Arizona golf circles, the course opened in 1971 and showcases the panoramic valley between the Mingus and Bradshaw Mountain ranges. The lush tree-lined fairways and slick bent-grass greens provide an elegant contrast to the rugged arid-terrain in these parts; and real test of golf too.

The par-72 layout offers three sets of tees ranging from 6,825 to 5,732 yards, with a rating of 70.7 and slope of 126 from the back tees.

Don’t let those innocent looking statistics fool you though, this golf course is going to test you from the dramatic, elevated 1st tee all the way through its water-threatened 18th green; there’s not a push-over hole on the course.

No. 3 - Prescott Country Club

Each nine has a memorable stretch of holes that place a premium on strategy and shot placement. On the front side, a 3-hole test starts on the 3rd hole, a 189-yard downhill par-3 with a pond on the right side of the elevated green.

The 4th is a 387-yard par-4, a bit uphill, with a long, narrow, undulating green that’s just tough to hit. The No. 1 handicap, 420-yard par-4 5th comes next; the fairway sweeps right-to-left around a bunker and a smallish green doesn’t welcome the long club you’ll play for your second.

The back-9 ends with three of the best. The tee at the 16th, a 391-yard par-4, tee provides a semi-blind tee shot to a fairway sweeping left-to-right. Mis-match your line of play and tee ball run-out and you’ll be scrambling to make one of those rumored “good” bogeys.

The 347-yard par-4 17th looks like a birdie hole, both on the card and in person. In reality, placing a drive in the proper fairway location, executing a precise second to this sloping green and holing the putt is easier said than done.

No. 18 - Prescott Country Club

The 18th provides what all great finishers do; one last chance to make birdie. Playing at just 510 yards, the par-5 appears defenseless, but it’s not. Severe mounding on the left side of the fairway puts a premium on your tee ball.

The smallish green is well protected by water and the greenside pond extends down the fairway to join up with two fairway-pinching trees, about 100 yards out, producing a very dangerous lay-up shot landing area. Put yourself just a little out of position here and you’ll be proud to salvage par.

The course offers an excellent practice facility and putting and chipping greens. Amenities include an outside pavilion, cocktail lounge, dining and banquet facilities with mountain views, and the Granite Grill Restaurant offering a delightful menu, including “all-day dinner”.

Members have access to other amenities, such as an outdoor swimming pool and fitness and recreation areas. Several membership options are available, including non-resident and social varieties.

Read the Arizona Golf Course Directory AZGA Golf Course Buzz for every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory/.

It’s “All Things Arizona Golf” from the Arizona Golf Authority.