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Posted in Texas Golf News
Wolfdancer GC Named 'Top 10 You Can Play' |
Designed by Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates, the Wolfdancer opened for play June 1 as the centerpiece to the Hyatt Lost Pines Resort and Spa, a 492-room destination resort, which opened its doors at the same time.
Yet the signature 12th hole is just the tip of the iceberg. Wolfdancer GC � whose name pays tribute to the local Tonkawa heritage of Central Texas � rambles over a dramatic stretch of terrain dotted with oak, cedar elm and pecan trees and cut by the Colorado River, which dramatically frames the right side of layout's superb finishing holes.
Much of the front nine careens over bold, rolling ground � a sort of Texas heathland � where little earth-moving was necessary, only the architectural savvy and restraint to complement great contour with classic design elements. For example, the 8th is a beautiful-but-brutish 483-yard par-4 where a cavernous maw of a fairway bunker guards a natural saddle-shaped landing area, the pivot point on this dogleg-left. The approach plays downhill to a green set high on a generous, natural shelf.
Elsewhere, Wilczynski created the drama: at 18 for example. This short par-5 of just 526 yards is reachable in two, but the tiny plateaued green sits hard by a bank (it's a cliff really) that falls off steeply into the Colorado River. Unlike many short par-5s, the risk/reward scenarios here aren't reserved for big hitters only. The second landing area on 18 is divided, somewhat diagonally, by a man-made crossing hazard 10 feet high and speckled with pot bunkers and native grasses. Lay up safely left of this one-of-a-kind landform and your short pitch to the green is essentially blind. Challenge the right side (i.e., the river) and you're rewarded with a much easier approach.
"That's my favorite aspect of the course � that it's playable and interesting to golfers of all abilities," said Eric Claxton, director of golf at the Wolfdancer. "From the tips, the Wolfdancer has very sharp teeth, if you know what I mean. But from the white tees the course is very navigable and really fun. That's no simple task, but Chris Wilczynski and Arthur Hills were able to create that balance, maintain the site's natural beauty and design a golf course that feels like it has been here forever."
Hills/Forrest and Hyatt have teamed up elsewhere in Texas: The Hyatt Hill Country Resort opened near San Antonio in 1992, and remains one of the top tracks in the Southwest (Hills/Forrest added a third nine there in 2005). Hills, who celebrated 40 years in the design business in 2006, boasts five other original designs in Texas (and 180 more worldwide).
The new Wolfdancer course, however, illustrates the extent to which Hills has broadened the firm’s stylistic repertoire in recent years, thanks in no small part to the emerging talents of his young partners in the firm: Steve Forrest, Chris Wilczynski, Drew Rogers and Brian Yoder. The style of Hills’ older work has been likened to a Volvo: not exactly boxy, but staunchly traditional and safe. That’s changing. Forrest’s 2005 designs at Hills Golf Club and Sand GC � both located in Sweden, fittingly � have drawn international attention for their flamboyance (the dune-strewn design at Sand GC has been called the Scandinavian Whistling Straits) and championship qualities (Hills GC has been touted as a future Ryder Cup site).
It was Wilczynski who handled Wolfdancer and the results are a striking combination of strategy and swagger � on a killer piece of land. The fairway at the 603-yard par-5 third, for example, seems nearly as wide as it is long. Fifteen randomly scattered fairway bunkers accentuate the heathland quality of this ridge-top hole, while also creating a dozen different lines of play. Perched at the terminus of this broad ridge on the property’s highest point (and surrounded by long strips of deep, flat-bottomed, grass-faced bunkering), the scythe-shaped putting surface offers 360-degree views of the course and surrounding countryside. Contrast this with the short 12th, a knee-knocking par-3 where tee and green cling to a steep hillside like a pair of giant toe-holds. There’s only one line of play here. The 7,205-yard, par-72 Wolfdancer Golf Club occupies some 150 acres of the sprawling 405-acre Hyatt Lost Pines, which bills itself as an "elegant backwoods" experience, and that’s a fair assessment. It’s two miles off the main road (30 minutes into Austin itself, 15 from the airport), but it feels utterly secluded, surrounded as it is by sleepy farms and the 1,100-acre McKinney Roughs nature preserve, which sits directly across the Colorado River. The Lost Pines region is separated from the better-known East Texas Piney Woods by some 80 miles. While nearly all of the "lost pines" grow in a narrow, 13-mile strip on either side of the Colorado River, a stand of 38 acres in McKinney Roughs sits 10 miles farther west of the main forest. This stand of Lost Pines is the westernmost tract of the country’s great southern pine belt. Native American legend says that wandering tribes planted the Loblolly seedlings here to remind them of the magnificent trees to the east, but it’s generally believed the Lost Pines are hardy survivors from the last Ice Age. All that said, the pine motif on the Wolfdancer course is notable for its minority status amid the many ancient oaks, cedar elms and pecans. Happily, for golfers, only in spots are they so numerous as to give off a truly forested feel. The sparse grouping � some of it naturally occurring, some the result of skilled selective-clearing � provides considerable strategic fodder (a leaning oak overhangs the front-right corner of a comma-shaped green at No. 5) while making the course look as though it’s been on this property for a long, long time. Exposed as it is, especially on the higher-ground, the wind howls at Wolfdancer, as it does on so many courses in this part of the country. "I like the sound of the wind in Texas," Arthur Hills has said. "The wind rushing through the trees. It can really add to the quality of a golf experience in a very subtle manner." About Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates Toledo, Ohio-based Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates is one of golf’s most prolific and respected course architecture firms, with more than 40 projects underway in Mexico (Paraiso del Mar, La Paz, Baja California Sur), Canada (Garden River First Nation GC in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario), Europe (Corte Velho in the Eastern Algarve of Portugal; Kustikov Golf Club outside Moscow) and the Caribbean (Salt Cay Resort and Spa in Turks & Caicos). For more information, visit www.arthurhills.com, or call 419/841-8553. The Wolfdancer was but one new Hills/Forrest course to open in 2006. Also christened this year were Sand Golf Club in J�nk�ping, Sweden, midway between Gothenburg and Stockholm, and The Club at Olde Stone, a much heralded members club in Bowling Green, Ky. About the Hyatt Lost Pines Resort and Spa Located between Bastrop and Austin, the Hyatt Lost Pines Resort and Spa opened in June 2006 and offers amenities for every interest. Located on 405 acres of diverse Texas terrain next to a 1,100-acre nature park, the resort offers guests a true, luxurious wilderness experience. Amenities include Wolfdancer Golf Club, an 18-hole signature course designed by Arthur Hills/Steve Forrest and Associates; Spa D’jango, a full-service 20,000-square-foot spa; and eight dining experiences. Recreational amenities include a water park with multiple pools, including a 1,100-foot flowing river pool and water slide; Camp Hyatt children’s program, bike riding, equestrian program, kayaking, rafting and fly-fishing on the Colorado River, as well as more than 16 miles of hiking trails. The resort also offers Camp Hyatt children’s program, and more than 60,000 square feet of indoor function space and 230,000 square feet of outdoor function venues. For more information, visit www.lostpines.hyatt.com or www.visitlostpines.com or call the resort at 512/308-1234. |
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