GOLF Golf in northern Michigan, like the area itself, is uniquely American. Its democratic. It holds out the possibly of being all things to all golfers. Northern Michigan is not so much one place as it is an expansive swath of appealing land, a region that cries out for someone to come along and stick 18 holes in the ground every five miles or so.
Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan
State University Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan State University However, before we conclude
that all of Michigan's golf courses are cut through dense forest, be aware that our state
offers many great "links" courses. These type of courses are mirrored
after the Scottish courses--windswept, with long heather grass and some dunes. Since
we have all of those, links courses are becoming popular here (see below). Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan State University And when you can play golf in northern Michigan, you feel healthy. The air is not
parched, as in the desert. It is not humid or salty, as the seaside. It is not suffused
with elitism, as at a stuffy country club. Playing golf in northern Michigan is the
athletic equivalent of taking the medicinal waters at a purifying spa. Source: Photograph by Randy Schaetzl, Professor of Geography - Michigan State University Just how did this part of America, an area that most people consider synonymous with
ice fishing, come to be a bona fide Golf Destination? It started when the areas
bustling ski resorts, figuring they could do something with their "low lands"
during the summer other than grow hay, decided to open golf courses. This brilliant and
noble idea was originally hatched in the 1950s, but the big boom in northern Michigan golf
didnt occur until about 30 years later, when the Grand Traverse Resort, in Traverse
City, opened a 7,065-yard, 146-slope-rated penal colony called The Bear. Its architect, as
you have probably deduced, was a fellow named Jack Nicklaus. And though the Bear, which
opened in 1985, is now almost universally regarded as a cruel prank, one of Jacks
early-period torture chambers, the course heralded the arrival of big-name course
designers to northern Michigan. Fazio, Palmer, Hills, Weiskopf, Player---all
have subsequently left their mark on the region�s landscape. Source: Michigan State University, Department of Geography
TOP STATES RANKED BY NUMBER OF PUBLIC GOLF COURSES, as of 1992
The natural place to begin a journey through northern Michigan---and it
is a journey; the courses are arrayed in little clusters, with each cluster roughly 30
minutes to an hour from the next---is in Traverse city. Play Gary Players Wolverine
course, another of the designers highly professional attempts at parkland
prettiness. Play The Bear. And then head out of town to Bellaire, a village so perfectly
quaint you would swear some clever set designer plunked it down in the middle of the Great
North Woods solely for its visual appeal. Bellaire has Shanty Creek Golf Course, a ski
resort/golf complex with 72 holes set on terrain that is hilly enough to provide fun
elevation changes but not so hilly as to require a chairlift. Until recently, the pride of
Shantys golf courses was The Legend, a sprawling Arnold Palmer track featuring big
greens and wide fairways that make even the most hopeless duffer feel like a king. But the
jewel in Shantys crown is Tom Weiskopfs Cedar River Golf Club. Like all of
Weiskopfs work, Cedar River is pretty, sensible and, above all, interesting, with
the designers typical mix of strategically vexing par 5s, visually intimidating par
3s and at least one drivable par 4. Forget about a links feel. This is pure North Woods
golf. The forest through which the course meanders is so thick youd think that even
the animals have a hard time getting around. For now, before the inevitable
multimillion-dollar homes blight the landscape, Cedar River seems destined to be
emblematic of all that is pleasing about northern Michigan golf. This material has been compiled for educational use only, and may not be reproduced without permission. One copy may be printed for personal use. Please contact Randall Schaetzl (soils@msu.edu) for more information or permissions. |