| Jones Trail course leaves me breathless |
| Wednesday, 19 March 2008 | |
|
The view from the first tee box at the Ridge Course provides a sense of the roller coaster day to come. The Ridge reminded me of some layouts I have played in the Asheville, NC, area. The architect probably never envisioned players would have to trek from the cart paths he designed. In an effort to keep them as far out of play as possible, a la Tom Fazio, he set many of the paths behind high slopes at one side or other of Oxmoor's wide fairways. That is wonderful for setting up clean vistas from tee boxes but not for negotiating your way across a fairway to hit your approach shot, with two or three clubs in hand (yardages on the cart paths don't help with distances for a ball across the fairway). Up I went from the cart path, then down a literally slippery slope to the fairway then, after my shot, back up the big slope and down to the cart. No one deserves those kinds of reminders of how out of shape they are. Speaking of shape, the fairways at Oxmoor were not perfect, with some areas of tufted grass forcing me to play winter rules. But it was winter, after all, and I was not at all put off. The greens were nice but the Jones Trail, which publishes its aeration schedule on line, still should announce when you make your reservation that the greens had been aerated recently. That said, most putts rolled toward the hole without incident. I was enthused from the start at Oxmoor. The first hole is just beautiful, a slight dogleg left whose elevated tee box gives you a chance at an extra carry of 15 to 20 yards on the 400-yard par 4 (from the orange, or men's, tees). An approach left short will either present you with a delicate chip over a deep swale in the green or put you in the swale itself. The chip is easier than the putt. As at Silver Lakes (see review on Monday), the "signature" hole at the Ridge course is a par 5, the 3rd, and the second toughest hole on the course. (The toughest on the card is the finisher, another par 5 and, at 572 yards, the longest of all.) But where the 18th hole's difficulty is about length, the 3rd is tricky and gorgeous, the smallish green fronted and backed by walls of shale rock (see photo below). The drive will not threaten the wide stream that crosses the fairway from 270 to 322 yards out, and the layup over it is about leaving yourself the proper distance for an uphill wedge to the green. You might consider 9 iron since any shot that comes up short will rebound off the rock wall and back down the fairway, making bogey not only possible but tough to achieve. The other holes on the course feature many of the same swoops and swerves, if not shale rock, of the 3rd. The par 3 8th is the only "water" hole on the course, with a piece of the lake fronting the entire green, along with peanut-shaped bunker, and coming into play as well along most of the back. At 159 yards, the hole is not long but when the wind is blowing, you may wind up shoving clubs in and out of your bag before you choose one for the shot. I have written about the bargain of Jones Trail membership, less than $2,000 annually for access to all courses with only the payment of a golf cart an extra. What about living near the Oxmoor Valley courses? As I
Ross Bridge, which includes an 8,200-yard layout, is the site of a Senior PGA tour stop in May. New town homes and single-family homes at Ross Bridge start in the $200s and run beyond $1 million; some home sites look out on the golf course. Downtown Birmingham, an interesting town with some excellent restaurants and the activities you would expect in a major university town, that should be just a 20-minute drive away. However, during my two days in the area, I was stuck in traffic routinely; the entrances onto and exits off of the interstates are poorly designed, the very opposite of the Jones golf courses.
The par 5 3rd at Oxmoor's Ridge Course is beautiful as well as treacherous. The tee shot (top photo) and layup shots are pretty routine, but that uphill approach (bottom photo) is hard as a rock. Comments (0)
![]() Write comment: Registered users please log in.
|
| Next > |
|---|


