Northern Michigan Golf Guide – Michigan Golf Courses and Resorts

Hawk’s Eye Golf Course (Bellaire) Opens Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

To allow golfers to take advantage of the early spring weather, Hawk’s Eye Golf Course near Bellaire will open on Tuesday, March 16, 2010…  Early season rates will be $20, Monday through Thursday and $30 Friday through Sunday.

Call for a Tee Time 231.533.4295

Early Season $59 Lodging Special

ONE NIGHT in The Legend Cottage Inn
18 HOLES OF GOLF
Price is per person base on double occupancy.

Visit website for more details.

Hawk’s Eye has been ranked as the 12th greatest public golf course in the state of Michigan. It is a beautiful semi-private, championship golf course that is the centerpiece of Hawk’s Eye Golf Community located in beautiful northern Michigan. The golf course opened its entire 18 hole layout for play in June of 2004. The course has continued to impress golfers of all levels. The reviews and comments about the course have been nothing short of spectacular.

Visit Hawk’s Eye Golf Course Website >>>>

 
 

Shanty Creek Resorts – The Classic Unlimited Golf Package

The Classic Unlimited

Starting at $119 per adult/per night based on double occupancy. Add breakfast for $8.

Includes:
• One night’s lodging
• One day unlimited golf on any Resort course (first round must be on Summit or Schuss Mtn. Golf Courses)
Taxes and fees apply; rate is subject to availability and may change without notice.

Call 866.901.3150 to book package.

Visit Shanty Creek Website >>>>

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Shanty Creek Resorts – Golf ‘Til You Drop Package

Golf ‘Til You Drop Package

Starting at $210 per adult/per night based on double occupancy.

Includes:
• One night’s lodging
• Two days of unlimited golf on any Resort course
• One breakfast
Taxes and fees apply; rate is subject to availability and may change without notice.

Call 866.901.3150 to book package.

Visit Shanty Creek Website >>>>

More Shanty Creek Golf and Lodging Packages

 
 

Fall Rates at Champion Hill – Benzie County

Fall Rates at Champion Hill….

Sept 7 thru Sept 30

9 Holes walking $16
9 Holes With Cart $22
18 Holes Walking $27
18 Holes With Cart $39

Twilight after 3:00 PM
9 Holes walking $14
9 Holes With Cart $20
18 Holes Walking $24
18 Holes With Cart $34

Junior and Senior Rates Mon – Thurs*
9 Holes walking $15
9 Holes With Cart $21
18 Holes Walking $23
18 Holes With Cart $35

Oct 1 to Closing

Fall Special
9 Holes walking $14
9 Holes With Cart $20
18 Holes Walking $24
18 Holes With Cart $36

Replay Rate $20 18 Holes all Season
*Juniors 17 or younger and Seniors 60 or older

Visit Champion Hill Website >>>>

 
 

The Homestead – Sharecare of Leelanau Golf Outing – August 19, 2010

Join us on Thursday, August 19th for a round of golf at Mountain Flowers, The Homestead’s Par 3, nine hole golf course. All proceeds benefit ShareCare of Leelanau. $27/person. 9am to 9pm.

Thank you to all who participated in this event in the past. ShareCare of Leelanau is a unique, non-profit corporation founded in 1993 by a group of retirees who wanted to overcome the problems that so often force seniors to leave their home prematurely. Their efforts provide Leelanau County residents comprehensive, affordable assisted living services in their own home.

Companies and organizations interested in hole sponsorship or prize donations, contact Neil Kalee at 231.334.5555.

2009 Hole Sponsors:

  • Wicksall Distributors
  • Glen Craft Marina & Resort
  • Bahle’s of Suttons Bay
  • Becky Thatcher
  • Alpers Excavating
  • Cherry Republic
  • Mitchell Graphics
  • King’s Challenge
  • Northwestern Bank
  • Bluebird
  • Hurst Industries
  • Bev & Merrill Almquist
  • The Bill Wise Family

2009 Prize Donations:

  • Brilliant Books
  • Village Inn in Suttons Bay
  • Cherry Republic

2009 Event Prize Winners:

  • Hole #5 – Closest to the Hole: Craig Ardery
  • Hole #7 – Closest to the Hole: Carol Chambers
  • Hole #9 – Longest Putt: Tracy Van Raalte

Congratulations! We’re looking forward to this year’s event!

For more information or tee times, call 231.334.5555.

Visit The Homestead Website >>>>

 
 

Shanty Creek Resort’s Pure Michigan Giveaway!

On July 1, 2011, Shanty Creek Resorts will be giving away a Pure Michigan Getaway Prize to 3 lucky Facebook fans.

The Grand Prize Winner will receive a two nights’ stay, Garmin GPS Unit and Nikon Digital Camera.

Two other fans will receive a gift certificate for a two nights’ stay.

All you have to do win is “like” the Shanty Creek Resorts facebook page and be sure to suggest it to your friends!

Visit the Shanty Creek Resorts Facebook Page >>>>

(Don’t Forget to click the “Like” button when you are there.)

 
 

Boyne Highlands Golf Instruction


Whether you’ve decided to take your first step into the world of golf, to introduce your kids to the game, or you’re looking to move one stroke closer to scratch, the nationally recognized professional instructors at the BOYNE Golf Academy can help you reach your goals. From beginners who have never gripped a club to touring professionals, our dedicated staff of golf professionals at Boyne Highlands Resort have the skills and knowledge necessary to improve every aspect of your game – from short to long. Give your “A” game a boost with one-on-one or group lessons – and you’re sure to see the results on your scorecard.

The BOYNE Golf Academy offers summer camps and clinics for golfers of all ages and abilities.  From adult golf schools, to junior camps, to ladies clinics, you’re certain to find a program tailored just for you.  And with four championship courses to compliment our unbeatable teaching facilities, you won’t find a better setting to grow your game!

Looking for a private lesson with one of our golf professionals? Contact the BOYNE Golf Academy or either of our Golf Shops to schedule a lesson.

  • BOYNE Golf Academy – 231.526.3848
  • The Heather Golf Shop  – 231.526.3029
  • The Ross Golf Shop – 231.526.3028

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Visit the Boyne Highlands Website >>>>

 
 

Boyne Mountain Golf Instruction


Looking to pick up the sport? Maybe you’re looking to take your game to the next level, hone your skills with some one-on-one golf lessons or would like to introduce your children to the game. Either way, there’s no better way to learn than at Boyne Mountain with the professionals at the BOYNE Golf Academy!

BOYNE is proud to have one of the largest and most dedicated staff of golf professionals that you will find anywhere. From a true beginner to a touring professional, they will help you to improve your shot making skills, short game, or gain the skills needed to play competent golf in a very short time.  We offer a variety of camps and clinics that will help golfers of all ages and abilities reach their goals and have more fun on the golf course.  And with two championship golf courses to go along with our state of the art training area, you’ll have all the tools necessary to reach your potential.

Call the BOYNE Golf Academy or the Boyne Mountain Golf Shop to sign up for a private lesson, clinic or camp today.

  • BOYNE Golf Academy – 231.526.3848
  • Boyne Mountain Golf Shop – 231.549.6028

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Visit the Boyne Mountain Website >>>>

 
 

Rick Smith’s Tip of the Month – Treetops Resort

A new swing theory has emerged on the PGA Tour in the past few months. Stack And Tilt. Some of the variables in this theory include, weight staying on your forward foot and getting your spine to lean towards the target all at the top of your back swing. I think one of the crucial problems with this theory is the tour players that are using this, are feeling one thing and doing another. What I mean is that they are feeling their weight on their forward foot and they are feeling their spine leaning towards the target, but in actuality they are not doing that. I will agree that there have been some great players who have kept their weight on their forward foot, but for every 1 player that has done that there have been a hundred who move there weight slightly back to the rear foot. There have also been a few players who have actually leaned their spine towards the target at the top of their swing, such as Colin Montgomerie and Jerry Barber, but the majority lean their spine slightly away from the target. So, the big question, is this the right theory for you. If you are a golfer who tends to move too far off the golf ball on the back swing, then yes. This feeling will help keep you more centered. Do I want your weight on your forward foot or spine leaning toward the target, NO! This will just be a feeling to help keep you more centered. Take a look at some of the guys who are using this theory and you will see their spine is either leaning away from the target or centered, not leaning towards the target. *Can’t make it to Michigan. Send a video of your swing to our academy for professional analysis.

Sign up to receive Rick Smith’s Tip of the Month via e-mail.

Visit Treetops Resort Website >>>>

 
 

Treetops Resort – Jones Masterpiece – Ducker Golf Report

Treetops Resort - Jones Masterpiece

Jones Masterpiece – Hole #6

By Ken Ducker

This was the first of the Treetops Courses and was the start of the Golf boom in Gaylord. It gave Gaylord a “Name” course, and then courses started popping up like mushrooms. There are now five courses at Treetops, (I haven’t investigated lately, so there may be more) but this was the one that got it all started.

Let’s be up front here: this course has one of the highest slope ratings in Michigan. For those of you that are not familiar with slope ratings, that means this baby is tough. So I suggest you bring a piece of humble pie when you tackle this one. And just maybe, a few extra balls. Is it too tough to play? By no means. I suggest you stick to the white tees , if you expect to come anywhere close to your normal score.

When you get back home and tell your friends about the Jones, you will talk about how tough she was (it’s okay to lie a little about your score on this one) but you will talk even more about the scenery. Believe me, the scenery is worth adding a few strokes to your normal game. Women love this course more than the men do. Must be the scenery thing; also they don’t have the egos to get bruised that men have.

The thing that sticks in my mind is how high a lot of the tees are above the fairways. Sometimes it seems that you are teeing off the rim of the Grand Canyon. Well, that may be stretching it a bit, but you get the idea. We seldom get to see this kind of a hole on a golf course, but on the Jones you will see many.

Sometimes you will be playing along the floor of a tree-lined valley… sometimes along the top of a ridge that just waits to grab your ball and pull it down among the trees… sometimes from ridge to ridge, with some nasty ravines in between full of stuff that loves to feed on things called Titleist, Top-flite or Ultra. Is there room for mistakes? Sure, but not much.

The greens are plenty big enough to make us all happy. At least until we look at a forty foot putt or so, with a knoll or two between our ball and the hole. Then we wish the greens weren’t quite so big. Best advice I can give you on how to putt these greens is to chip close. If you read my article on “The Mysteries of Putting” you will know why.

If you get home in two on the par fives, chances are your knuckles drag on the ground. So don’t count on an easy bird. In fact, don’t even count on an easy par. From the white tees the length is not the problem because they range from 430 to 500 yards. The trouble is keeping the ball in the fairway.

What you think is a good drive may surprise you. Keep the ball under control and you’ll be okay. Try for that few extra yard off the tee, you may find out the meaning of the word scramble.

The par threes range from awesome (view on #6 with a 120 ft. drop) to quietly spectacular (the pond and well bunkered green of #13). Elevation changes will make you think a little longer on your club selection. Number 4 seems to have begged the question, “How could I be short?’ many times. You may want to use 2 more clubs than the yardage indicates. The Golf Gods seem to favor this hole.

This course can play tough (whites), mean (blues), or sadistic (black). The low handicap golfer probably will want to play the blues, although if you come within four or five of you handicap from the whites you played a great game. There is about 100 yards difference between the white and black tees on some holes.

If you play this course and expect to shoot a few strokes over your handicap you will have a great day and see some of the greatest views on any course in Michigan. If you come and expect to tame this one, frustration will be your golf partner for the day, So relax and enjoy the ride. (Speaking of riding. Traveling these cart paths – up and down and around – is worth the price of admission.)

Put this one on your must play list.

Ken

 

Jones Masterpiece – Hole #11

Jones Masterpiece – Hole #13

Jones Masterpiece – Hole #14



 

• See – Treetops Resort – Jones Masterpiece – Photos

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The Legend at Shanty Creek Resorts – Ducker Golf Report

The Legend at Shanty Creek Resorts

The Legend – Hole #1 – A scenic, downhill par 5.

By Ken Ducker

I know that this may come as a disappointment to some but this is not a story about me. I’m only a legend in my own mind.

No, this is about a true legend, Arnold Palmer, or at least about a course he designed called “The Legend” at Shanty Creek.

Arnold transformed this piece of northern Michigan landscape. He took the big trees, the water, the creeks, the wetlands and the sand and gave us one beautiful course. It still amazes me how these people can take a chunk of land that is full of ravines and trees so thick you can’t see more than a few yards and come up with a course that makes sense.

I guess that’s why he’s a legend and I run a motel.

The Legend begins with two of the nicest starting holes in the north. The first is a par 5 where the fairway keeps going down all the way to the green. It’s just a great hole from every point of view. After the leisurely trip down the valley on hole one, you have to climb out of the valley on number two. This trip is a little more daunting. From the tee, you have to hit over a ravine to a not-too-large plateau. If you land safely there you have to hit over another ravine to the green. This hole is not for the weak of heart.

You could call the first two holes “The Beauty and the Beast”.

The rest of the course is more like the first hole — tees that are set high with tree-lined fairways falling away in front of you. Of course not all the tees are up, but enough to make for some great views.

The large, well-maintained, bent grass fairways give you the impression that it’s almost impossible to get in to trouble at the Legend. However, quite often the angle of these fairways just beg you to cut a corner here, hit over that tree there. They present you with the opportunity to cut off a lot of yards. Sadly, when you find yourself in the weeds or behind a tree you won’t be able to blame tight fairways for your troubles.

This course has large greens that are in great shape. Most are tiered just to make it interesting. Crafty undulations test our skill at reading greens.

The sand traps range in size from small, almost pot bunkers, to large bunkers that are almost a work of art with the contours that were put into them. Arnie didn’t want to punish us with sand traps. I think he must have added them just to help spruce up the course.

When Arnie was a boy growing up helping his dad mow fairways with that Ford tractor we see on television, I am sure he had a pet dog because he sure likes doglegs. Half or more of the holes on this course has some degree of dogleg. Some very slight and a couple almost ninety degrees. Most are some where in between the two.

The large fairways and greens make Legend the type of course that Arnie would want us to play because after all, he is the Ambassador of Golf. He’s a nice guy. He wants us to enjoy the game. Just relax and enjoy the beauty of the north woods. Right?

Not exactly.

Although The Legend is a thing of beauty, don’t be lulled too quickly into a sense of everything being all right. Arnie, the ambassador of golf, had a few sneaky things to add to the mix at The Legend. I believe the golf gods made him do these things.

I think the golf gods made Arnie leave a few trees on the corners of a some of the doglegs, or just off to the side of some greens. Trees that you hardly notice. Trees that you think are really not in the way.

Well these trees can deflect shots better than NHL goalies. The Russian five couldn’t get a shot past these trees. Just when you think you got one past them, smack! So quick you can’t even see it.

Sneaky.

Then the golf gods had Arnie add a few mounds that just nudge your nice drive into the rough, or even worst, into some wetland that Arnie wouldn’t have left there.

Really sneaky.

And they were still not satisfied.They had Arnie cut a creek or two across some fairways that you pay no attention to until you start looking for your ball.They had him put a small river and some big boulders in front of a par five. They had him move fairway traps to bring them more into play. They had him raise some greens up just a smidgen so your ball now has a chance to kick into the sand if you are just a little off with your shot to the green.

Extremely sneaky.

It must have been the golf gods. Arnie would never do that to us would he? He’s too nice a guy. If Arnie did this, and not the golf gods, he is a genius at putting the trouble in the spots that give you the opportunity to make a great shot, but grabs the shot that is just a little off. He makes you pay a small price for not paying attention to where your shot should be. He makes you do what you should do all the time when you play golf. Think.

The Legend is sneaky tough. You just don’t notice the trouble. It’s hidden in all that beauty like that snake in the garden.

So enjoy the views, but pay attention.

My hats off to Arnold, and the Legend.

Ken

 

The Legend – Hole #4

The Legend – Hole #12

The Legend – Hole #15



 

• See – Shanty Creek Resorts – The Legend – Photos

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