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Autumn, Cape Cod, and Golf. A Winning Combination

By JOHN TORSIELLO

Ah, autumn. What a wonderful time of the year and it hardly gets better than September, October and even November to play golf. The mild days and cool nights help golf course turf stay green and lush, even after the hot summer we had. And there is perhaps not a better place to play the game we love at this time of year than Cape Cod on the southeastern tip of Massachusetts.

The slower pace of fall on the Cape also means you don’t have to fight for tee times. All the golf you could want is located within an hour or two-hour drive from wherever you bunk down for the night. From championship 18-hole layouts, resort courses and charming, old nine-hole tracks, “The Cape” offers myriad golf options. Because of the proximity to the warming waters of the ocean, Cape Cod remains fairly mild throughout the year and courses will remain open year-round weather permitting.

It’s not just the golf that is to be enjoyed on Cape Cod, but pretty much everything

about this narrow piece of precious land that stretches into the Atlantic Ocean like a flexed arm. When not smashing drives or nailing seven-irons to the green, you can get away from it all on the beaches (quiet at this time of year), hiking trails, and shopping in cozy villages. Check out the numerous seafood restaurants and lobster shanties, where you can sample freshly-caught seafood and enjoy a beverage while sitting on a picnic table and gazing out into a harbor or the rolling ocean waves.

The National Seashore and its remodeled visitor’s center, as well as a number of wildlife sanctuaries, feature miles of walking and biking trails and unfettered strolls along the beach. And it’s easy to find suitable accommodations, whether it is on the ocean or bay side of The Cape, a posh hotel in Chatham or a weathered cottage in the dunes in Wellfleet.

Thanks to Golfing Magazine’s comprehensive Course Play Stimulus Program, our subscribers can try out a number of courses on Cape Cod. Check out the details of this can’t miss offer in this issue. Call 860563-1633, or visit www.FreeGolf.net to sign up.

Here are some courses to play on your autumn Cape Cod road trip.

Sandwich Hollows Golf Club in Sandwich offers views of Cape Cod Bay to the north from several holes. The course is bordered by hundreds of acres of conservation area to the east, west and south, giving golfers the feeling of being isolated from players on other holes. Sandwich Hollows features a number of par fours on the short side, several long par-threes, and challenging par-fives, one of which (the sixth hole) measures close to 600 yards from the tips.

Yarmouth is home to 45 holes of golf that encompasses the newly renovated Bayberry Hills Golf Course, the Links 9, and Bass River Golf Course.

The work at Bayberry Hills Golf Course was undertaken by Tim Gerrish of Providence, R.I., a former member of the Geoffrey Cornish/Brian Silva team that laid out the track in 1988. Changes were made to make the nearly 7,300-yard course friendlier to

the average golfer, yet maintain or even enhance the course’s challenge to the low handicap player.

Bunkers were repositioned to enhance play options, and others replaced with closely mown collection areas on some holes, providing multiple options for greenside recoveries, fairway corridors have been widened, and green surrounds have been expanded. Rough areas in the front of greens have been replaced by tightly mown fairway to create the illusion of false fronts in many cases. Fairway corridors were widened and tree lines thinned, allowing for recovery solid par-threes and exposure to the Cape’s shots where previously none existed. This wind, which makes the course play different feature, accomplished through the removal from day to day. A number of the holes are of over 3,000 trees, provides enhanced course doglegs, which makes approach shots tricky playability, along with a vast improvement in if you don’t put your tee shot in the proper aesthetics and added panoramic course views. position.

The course’s original bunkers were also re- that demands an accurate shot over water to built to reduce sand area, while maintaining reach the green. proper proportions and enhancing the original Bass River is over 100 years old that style. The bunkers were lined with previous the legendary Donald Ross renovated and capillary concrete that allowed dramatic expanded. The layout rolls along among trees sand flashing, while reducing bunker face and sandy hills and features narrow fairways, maintenance. small greens and views of nearby Bass River.

Forward teeing areas on four holes were added for more options in course setup and to provide additional user friendliness. Three tees were resurfaced, including a new championship tee on number three (a par three), stretching the course to nearly 7,300 yards. In some cases, tees were located for better playability, and on other holes additional playing surface was added to provide varied play lines and more tee placements.

The Links 9, which is on the property at Bayberry, opened in 1999 and is a fun layout, with wide open fairways,

Cranberry Valley Golf Course

Dennis Pines Golf Course

The club’s signature hole is the sixth, a 169yard par-three that plays across the river. The layout is on the short side, but the holes demand good shot making and a good short game, a typical Donald Ross demand on the player.

In Brewster, you will find The Captains Golf Course, which features 36 holes of golf on two very distinct 18-hole layouts. The club calls itself the Cape’s premier public golf facility, and the conditioning here is always excellent, and the golf challenging but approachable for players of all abilities.

The Port Course plays to a yardage of 6,724 yards and has a slope of 131 and a rating above its posted par of 72, which gives an indication of the difficulty of some of the holes. One of the best holes is the 573-yard, par-five eighth. A pond guards the putting surface and there are several large fairway bunkers to complicate matters.

The Starboard Course plays around 6,800 yards and has a slope of 122. It’s a bit more “player friendly” than its sister layout, with wider fairways, large greens, and fewer bunkers than the Port Course, which makes it more suitable for mid- and higher handicap players. Number 18 is a great finishing hole, a 534-yard par-five that can be reached in two by big hitters.

Cranberry Valley Golf Course, located in Harwich, is a well maintained course that features a superb routing that flows easily over beautiful terrain, which includes marshes and, of course, a few cranberry bogs.

Cranberry Valley isn’t overly long, 6,745 yards from the tips, but there are a number of dogleg holes that add invisible yardage and demand proper club selection and shot placement off the tee. Par is 72, with the course rated 73.4 and a slope of 133 from the back tees. Most of the course’s par fours measure less than 400 yards, including the 309-yard 15th, which is approachable off the tee for the long hitters. All of the par-fives, except for perhaps the 18th hole, are reachable in two for the bombers. The par-threes are very demanding, none more so than the next last hole, a brutal 229-yarder.

Dennis Highlands, in the town of Dennis, is situated on 175 acres of pine and oak forest on the north side of Dennis. Designed by Jack Kidwell and Mike Hurdzan and opened for play in 1984, Dennis Highlands is considered by some to be one of the “crown jewels” in the

The Captains Golf Course

traditional list of fine Cape Cod golf courses. It boasts a spectacular practice range and offers a visually enjoyable golf experience.

And not far away, Dennis Pines is located on 170 acres of pine forestland in East Dennis. Designed by Henry C. Mitchell and opened for play in 1966, Dennis Pines has long been noted as one of the toughest layouts on Cape Cod. Tree-lined corridors place a great premium on accuracy rather than distance. Water comes into play on four holes, and the 12th hole is known as one of the most difficult par-fives anywhere. The Pines plays 7,029 yards from the tips and will provide the most accomplished players a true test of golf.

Visit www.CapeCodChamber.org for individual course website information.

Sandwich Hollows Golf Club

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