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Even if you hit the perfect (and long) drive at #9 at The Ridges, you are still faced with a decision:  Aim directly at the green and tempt the creek that runs along the left, or play a safer "carom" shot to the hill that guards the short right side of the green.   
 
    I played a round at The Ridges Golf Club in Jonesborough, TN, earlier today.  It is golf community course in the strictest sense of the term, with homes lurking above the course at virtually every turn.  I'll have more to say about the course in coming days but the #1 handicap hole on the course, the brutish long par 4 9th, is worth adding to our collection of #1 handicaps here.
    Arthur Hills is one of my favorite designers, and I have noticed an odd habit he has of combining breather

I snorted at the yardage book's cavalier line that "Most golfers will play this hole as a par 5."

holes and incredibly tough ones into the same routing.  The Ridges follows the pattern, and #9 could be his toughest.  The hole measures a robust 435 yards from the "Members" tees which are for decent older golfers like me who can't hit the ball more than 225 yards anymore.  At the tips, or tournament tees, #9 checks in at 474 yards and from the "championship" tees, what the single digit players will go for, it measures 461 yards.  I snorted at the yardage book's cavalier line that "Most golfers will play this hole as a par 5," but in reality, that is how I played it. 
    Intimidated by the trees down the left side of the hole, I pushed my drive out to the right rough, well right of the yardage book's guidance to hit a good one to the center or center right fairway.  Still, I hit my drive as far as any during my round and it got a favorable bounce off the side of the hill that runs below the cart path.  I was left with about 225 yards in, and aimed my three wood at the right side of the green, as the yardage book suggested.  You definitely do not want to go left of the green, where the stream that runs the entire length down the left side of the fairway snakes along the left side of the green.
    Fortune smiled on me.  My shot hung up on the very top of the large hill that guards the right side of the fairway near the green.  Unless you are tempted by a go at the narrow and well-protected green - foolish, in my opinion - it is unlikely an approach shot will come off the hill through the thick rough.  I had a great lie in the Bermuda, was able to get a lob wedge under the ball and popped it out to five feet from the hole.  When I made the putt, I felt as if I had made birdie instead of a one-putt par.  It was the highlight of the day, even though I did make two actual birdies during the round.
    I'll provide a full golf review on The Ridges and the surrounding community later this week.

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 On the tee box at the long 9th hole at The Ridges, you can choose to play it safe to the right or tempt fate, and  the stream that runs down the entire left side. 

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The par 3 7th at Draper Valley combines most of the elements of the rest of the course.


    When I am on the road and have a few minutes to spare, I like to follow the signs from the interstate to a golf course I have never heard of.  Typically, I don't have quite enough time for a four-hour round, but I'll pick up a scorecard, nose around the clubhouse and take a few photos of the course.
    I knew nothing about Draper Valley Golf Club in Draper, VA, but it was just three miles off Interstate 81 and I decided to stop there today.  It turned out Draper Valley is in the middle of a golf community of nice homes of recent vintage, well spaced out and almost all with views down to the golf course below (they are serious about the "valley" in their name).  Although the landscape appears to be former farmland and, therefore, few home sites have any trees on them, the prices on the home sites and homes for sale seemed quite reasonable.  A five-bedroom, three-bath home adjacent to the fifth green is on the market for just $319,900 and lots begin around $60,000.

    The setting for the golf course is both convenient - just off the highway - and picturesque, with the Blue Ridge Mountains framing the background.  I didn't have quite enough time to play, but from what I could tell, the course was in excellent condition, the greens were small but contoured, and there appeared to be enough sand and water to make things interesting if not particularly challenging.  From the tips, the course measures almost 7,100 yards but plays to a rating of 73.5 and slope of just 127, pretty wimpy for any course of that length.  Judging from the little hole diagrams on the scorecard, the approaches at six greens must carry over water in front, including at the finishing hole, a short but testy looking par 4 which makes a 90 degree right hand turn less than 100 yards from the green.
    Draper Valley, I learned, was rated by Golf magazine in 2007 as one of "The Top 50 Golf Courses in the U.S. for under $50."  Sure enough, green fees on the weekend are just $49, electric cart included.
    Draper Valley Golf Club is located just off Interstate 81 in Draper, VA.  Tel:  (866) 980-GOLF.  Web:  DraperValleyGolf.com.  Blue tees:  7,070 yards, rating 73.2, slope 127.  White tees:  6,412, 70.3, 112.

    If you are interested in a home in the Draper Valley community or any other golf home, let me know and I will be happy to put you in touch with a qualified real estate agent in the area.  No cost, no obligation.