The Golf Course The course offers some
wonderful views. Click any of the photo's to the right to enlarge.
Click here to
view the card of the course Click here to
view the course layout Sculpted out of the natural contours
of the land by men and horses equipped with pick, shovel, wheel barrows and horse
drawn carts - no mighty earth moving machinery with which to change the face of
nature - it remains today largely unchanged since its creation. Improved, perhaps,
lovingly cared for, certainly, and offering the golfer the chance to play golf
as it was meant to be played, on an immaculately prepared and presented piece
of golfing heaven. Those were the heady days of Cleeks, Mashies, Niblicks,
Jiggers and Hickory shafts; when winning the Open was as much about the size of
your hat as it was about your four round total; when it took guile and cunning
to think your way round a tricky course; golf truly was a different game when
this wonderful course was born. Perhaps best described as an "Upland
Links" course, it provides a true test for golfers of all abilities. Lush upland
turf on which the ball sits up invitingly, turf banks and natural hazards, with
well protected true greens, rated amongst the best in Wales, it offers the chance
to play links type golf amongst the rolling hills. By the standards of today,
the course is not long but do not be lulled into thinking that it is a push over;
against a par of 69 the course record still stands at only 65. Overlooking
the town and the neighbouring valleys, you get a sense of timelessness as you
look down from the first tee across the boating lake to the roofs of the Victorian
town. To play the course you almost need a new game
plan each time that you step onto the next tee. Length is not the most important
asset on the course. If you fail to place the ball in the correct part
of the fairway off the tee, many approach shots are played blind, and blind shots
can be dangerous and often lead to ugly double bogies! Out of bounds
comes into play on eight of the holes and a solid 75 can soon become a disappointing
85 if you put a couple over the fence and lose one or two when going for dangerous
shots. This is the romance of playing golf at Llandrindod Wells. Linger
a moment on your round and absorb the magic of the soft rolling hills which surround
you. Admire the Buzzards and Red Kites which patrol the sky above the course.
To single out one hole is almost impossible but there has always been
a certain notoriety attaching to the lucky 13th! From an elevated tee, you face
a tee shot that has to carry an almost vertical bank some 200 yards away, with
out of bounds tight to the left side and trees and deep rough to the right.
The approach shot from the fairway is a fairly simple one with a short iron
to one of the more open greens on the course but, if you are standing on that
tee with the wind in your face and the rain coming down, needing at worst a five
to stay in the competition, you may well be just about to get the fright of your
life ... Not for nothing did Harry Vardon name the 297 yard, par 4, 18th
"Death or Glory". Stand on the tee and make your decision, take an iron and play
safe, or a wood and attack the carry of some 250 yards over a deep valley and
the road beyond? But take heart, this hole has been aced, but only the once.
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| | | 5th
Green From the Road | | | | 7th
Fairway Looking Over Pond | | | | 16th
Green | | | | 17th
Looking South | | | | 18th
Fairway - The Final Chip | | | | Going
For The Flag on the 6th | | | | Putting
on 15th Green | | Putting
on 17th Green | | Stormclouds Over the
9th | |