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Northern Arizona Prescott

Talking Rock Golf Club

Arizona Golf Course List – Arizona Golf Authority Golf Course Guide

Arizona Golf Course List - Talking Rock Golf Course - Arizona Golf Authority
Talking Rock Golf Course

This private country club layout, among the last designed by Jay Morrish, is the centerpiece of a sprawling 3,500-acre master-planned community that recently was ranked as one of the top 50 such communities by Where To Retire magazine.

Located northwest of Prescott, Arizona in the Williamson Valley, an area where Phoenix area residents often go to escape the summer heat, it offers a peaceful, serene setting where tees and greens appear to float on a sea of native grasses. The course winds through pinion pine forests, with mild desert terrain in the transition areas highlighted by wispy native grasses.

“The developers offered me the opportunity to design the course wherever I wanted it on the entire property, as long as it appeared as natural as possible,” Morrish said. “When you have that, you can do some pretty special things.”

The course is defined by generous landing areas, deep, strategically placed bunkers and aprons that allow golfers to run shots up to greens – a feature typical of the Scottish links-style courses that Morrish favors.

Among other high-caliber events, Talking Rock has hosted the Southwest Section of the PGA Championship event and from the tips it can be a beast, but golfers have plenty of options here to pick their pleasure or their poison.

Morrish provided six sets of tees, stretching to 7,350 yards from the tips, but plays at just 5,105 from the forward tees. From the back, the par-72 layout is rated at 73.7 with a slope of 136.

The front nine is the more level of the two, winding through pine forests with excellent views of local peeks such as Granite Mountain. The back nine climbs to higher elevations with rugged terrain and even better mountain settings.

Deep bunkers provide the most significant obstacles as there is water in play on just three holes and the par 5s are particularly strong. Those include the never-ending sixth, which stretches to 641 yards, and the 11th, which plays at “only” 563 yards and has a creek cutting across the fairway near the green that adds a risk-reward element.

The ninth and 18th holes, which play at 589 and 542 yards, are separated by a large lake near the end of their two fairways. Both fairways and greens are heavily bunkered.

Talking Ranch offers golf and non-golf memberships and those members enjoy first-class amenities such as fine dining, entertainment, an extensive trail system, outdoor activities and state-of-the-art fitness, tennis and swimming facilities.

Visit our Arizona Golf Course Directory List and read the AZGA Player’s Review for every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

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

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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.

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Northern Arizona Prescott

Antelope Hills Golf Course

Arizona Golf Courses – Arizona Golf Authority Golf Course Reviews

Located on the eastern outskirts of Arizona’s “Mile High City’’ – Prescott (5,300 feet above sea level) – Antelope Hills is where the locals play. And they’ve been playing here for quite some time.

Antelope Hills Golf Course - Arizona Golf Course Reviews from the Arizona Golf Authority
Antelope Hills - North Golf Course

The North Course was built in 1956 by one of Arizona’s architectural pioneers, Lawrence Hughes, and embodies traditional values like tight, tree-lined fairways, strategic bunkering and roller-coaster, bent-grass greens.

Avid club players consider the North Course to be an Arizona golf treasure and routinely make the 90-minute drive north from the Scottdale – Phoenix metro area to savor its long-protected and preserved aura from a time gone by.

If stately elms and old school golf is not your thing, tee it up on the Gary Panks-designed South Course, where the links-style fairways and greens are wide open and expose awe-inspiring views of the surrounding Chino Valley and surreal Granite Dells rock formations.

Before and after your round, the on-site Manzanita Grille will handle any food and beverage needs you may have. The patio overlooks the South Course and the Bradshaw Mountains beyond. It’s a full service bar and restaurant affair that’s so good, it serves just as much local traffic that’s not playing golf that day, as golfers who are.

Arizona Golf Authority AZGA “Local Hang” – If you plan to stay in town a few days, just make sure you “camp out’’ downtown at the 100-year-old Hassayampa Inn, just a pitching wedge away from Prescott’s infamous saloons on Whiskey Row.

Who knows? A couple of shots at the Palace Bar or Cadillac Saloon and perhaps you’ll see the Hassayampa Inn’s notorious ghost, fondly named “Faith,’’ who keeps an eye on things around the hotel. You wouldn’t be the first to say you did!