| Once lost, now Founders Club adds new polish to old neighborhood |
| Saturday, 22 March 2008 | |
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Founders is one of two U.S. courses that planted Emerald Bermuda grass for its greens. Thomas Walker, who came out of Gary Player's design shop, was given a nice budget and, apparently, a whole lot of sand, to remake the old Sea Gull. In the manner of the local True Blue Golf Club, Walker lined most of the fairways with waste bunkers, using them as cart paths rather than building the ugly and tougher-to-maintain asphalt or concrete paths. Waste areas are cleaner looking, but some locals whine about having to take too many shots from sand. Yet the fairways are still quite generous, as they were in Sea Gull's days, and the sand is compact enough to make most lies no big deal. One piece of advice; play earlier in the day if you can, before golf shoe marks and cart tracks increase the odds of a bad lie. The other most noticeable feature at Founders, especially if you recall Sea Gull, are the moguls and pot Conditions at Founders Club were wonderful on a beautiful breezy day. Except for once when my ball found a deep fairway divot hole, I did not come close to needing to roll the ball over. Fairways and tees seemed to be in late spring condition, a testament to the wise decision of the Founder's owners, the locally based Classic Golf Group, to push off opening the course from last September, during a drought, to the end of February. The greens, though, were the highlight for me, featuring an innovative heat-resistant Bermuda Emerald grass that has the properties of bent grass. I thought they putted wonderfully and were shaved to a fairly quick speed, especially for a public course. Founders Club is one of only two courses in the U.S. that uses that particular strain of grass (the other is in the Arizona desert). The homes that surround the golf course rarely encroach on it, with most just beyond lakes and streams. Out of bounds stakes were well away from the fairways. The Hagley Estates neighborhood shows the kind of hodgepodge of housing styles you would expect from a community developed separately from its adjacent golf course. Some houses are small and old, not much more than 1,000 square feet, while others are more modern and would fit comfortably in a local planned community, like Pawleys Plantation. The Hagley homeowners must love what has been done to the golf course. On one hole, I skulled a The Founders Club, Highway 17, Pawleys Island, SC. Phone: 1 (800) 833-6337 / (843) 237-2299. Web: TheClassicGolfGroup.com. Architect: Thomas Walker. Par 72. Back tees: 7,007 yards. White tees: 6,394. Gold tees: 5,506. Rating and slope not available.
Waste bunkers are the cart paths at the Founders Club. Play early before carts and feet chew up the sand. Comments (0)
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