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Silver Lakes provides some helpful advice to visiting golfers before they tee off on #1.

    It is an occupational hazard that I only have time to play most courses just once before I am on to the next one.  It is tough to get the measure of a course until you play it two or three times at least.  The most you can hope for once around is a general impression of the course's qualities and, if it has a great hole, a lasting memory of that hole.
    That is how it was for me at the Silver Lakes Course on the Robert Trent

If you are willing to play the pioneer, you will find bargain real estate and golf near Silver Lakes.

Jones Trail a couple of weeks ago.  The Heartbreaker and Mindbreaker nines that I played - the other is named the Backbreaker -- were quintessential RT Jones layouts, with plenty of sand and large elevated and sloping greens.   The round was anything but a budget breaker, a bargain at $65, cart included.
    Also a bargain is the real estate adjacent to and in the general vicinity of the 36 holes at Silver Lakes (the additional nine is an impressive and challenging Short Course).  As I reported earlier here, a 4 BR, 3 BA home on a nice lot overlooking the course was listed at under $300,000.  Plop that same home onto a half-acre in a golf community in the Carolinas, for example, and you will plunk down twice to three times the price.  Of course, Glencoe, AL is not exactly Chapel Hill or Myrtle Beach, and the closest cities - Gadsden and Anniston - aren't either.  But if you are willing to play the pioneer in exchange for outstanding golf at a bargain price - access to the Jones Trail's 26 courses is less than $2,000 annually - then the surrounding area is worth a visit (and you can play excellent golf courses while you are checking things out).
    Overall, the Silver Lakes courses were in decent condition for late winter and after a few weeks of major storms, some with tornado activity.  Nevertheless, the greens were firm and fast, showing some residual pockmarks from an earlier aeration.  For the most part, they putted true.  I did roll the ball over a few times on the over-seeded fairways, but that was mostly a result of unfilled divots and just a few sparse places.  The dormant rough made for beautiful frames for Jones' sculpted fairways, many of which gently swept down from tees and up to greens (unlike my next day's round at Oxmoor Valley, near Birmingham, where the slopes were anything but gentle and I was exhausted after my round there).  The bunkering at Silver Lakes was expertly handled, forcing positioned tee shots and lofted approaches to well-protected greens.  They were wonderfully carved into slopes and a treat visually.
    That memorable hole for me was the 7th on the Heartbreaker, a par 5 classic that forced concentration on every shot.   It isn't long, but it will be reachable in two only for the biggest bangers (and biggest risk takers).  I took photos from tee to green (see below), and I hope they give you a sense of the quality of the hole, the best of a collection of 18 nice ones.

Silver Lakes Golf Club, 1 Sunbelt Pkwy, Glencoe, AL, (256) 892-3268.  Located between Anniston and Gadsden.  Web:  www.RTJGolf.com.  Heartbreaker 9 Back tees,  3,827 yards, rating  39.1; middle tees,  3,300 yards, 36.3; front tees, 2,966, 34.4; shorter tees also available.

 

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From the tee box, the 7th hole on the Heartbreaker nine reveals its charms and challenges.  The best play is to aim at the 250 yard pole; hit much farhter and a creek that crosses the fairway 200 yards from the green could come into play...

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The ideal second shot will leave you a wedge in from 80 to 100 yards.  You will need significant loft to fly the bunkers and land softly on the firm green...

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The third shot is uphill to a narrow green that arcs from front left to rear right, with three separate levels.  Finding the level that holds the cup is a must, otherwise three putts are a real possibility.


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Like the rest of the course, the par 3 12th at Caledonia in Pawleys Island, SC, shows plenty of spunk but no adjacent homes.  Residential communities are off property, just north and south of the golf course.

    Golfweek magazine's annual ranking of golf courses "you can play" was published a week ago and, as usual, the publication does not look favorably on courses with homes adjacent to fairways.  A few, however, did make the cut.
    Chief among those in the southeast is Cuscowilla, which perennially finishes first or second nationally when Golfweek publishes its list of best residential golf courses (coming in the next few months).  Cuscowilla, about 90 minutes from Atlanta, is a Coore/Crenshaw layout that shows great respect for the land that abuts Lake Oconee.  It doesn't appear much earth was pushed around and the native grasses are in abundance.  The

Pinehurst is paradise, with the highest concentration of high-quality courses playable year round.

architects went so far as to mix sand for the bunkers with the native Georgia clay, giving the sand an indigenous and attractive red caste.  Cuscowilla was named 39th overall of the "best modern courses" in the nation and #1 on the "best courses you can play" list in Georgia.  Three of the much praised Reynolds Plantation courses just across Lake Oconee finished in the 5th through 7th places on the Georgia list and not on the national list.
    Of course, Donald Ross' legendary Pinehurst #2 course copped top honors in North Carolina and 11th place nationally.  For those who would play golf 24x7 if the sun shone always, Pinehurst is paradise, with the highest concentration of high-quality courses playable year round.  The magazine lists six courses within 30 minutes of Pinehurst on its top 10 in North Carolina, including the wild and wacky Tobacco Road, which I played last year and reviewed extensively on this site.  I noted with some interest that the community-oriented Leopard's Chase, a new course north of Myrtle Beach, also made the Golfweek state list, as did River's Edge in Shallotte, NC, a community course designed by Arnold Palmer.
    In South Carolina, the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island of course tops the state list and ranks #20 nationwide.  But after Harbour Town's #2 slot, the rest of the state is almost entirely a Myrtle Beach area affair, and Golfweek doesn't seem to mind the presence of homes on many of them.  You can see some homes from the venerable Dunes Club (#3) but almost none adjacent to the Augusta National-like Caledonia Golf & Fish Club (#4).  The Mike Strantz masterpiece also squeaked onto Golfweek's list of Best Modern Courses at number 100.  The rest of the Myrtle Beach list, which included Tidewater (#6), True Blue (#7), TPC at Myrtle Beach (#8) and Barefoot Landing's (Davis) Love Course (#10), are all unabashedly part of communities.
    Grand National, a course I played during my trek along the Robert Trent Jones Trail in Alabama week before last, weighed in at #5 on the Alabama list, just edged out by #4 Ross Bridge, another Trail course.  I wrote here about my round at Grand National [click for review], which is midway between the university town of Auburn and Opelika.  Grand National has no homes adjacent to its layout, but a community of single-family houses is going up just down the road.  I liked the course a lot but thought Oxmoor Valley, near Birmingham, was an even better layout.
    When I scanned the list of courses in the golf-rich state of Florida, I couldn't suppress a smile.  There ranked at #13 was the Golf Club at North Hampton, an Arnold Palmer links-style course between Fernandina Beach and Jacksonville.  It was a revelation when I played it a year ago because it was the first Arnold Palmer course I liked and because I liked it a lot, one of the best I had played in recent memory.  It is always nice to have an opinion validated by the experts.
    For a link to Golfweek's "best of" lists, click here.
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Although Grand National (see photo of 5th hole, top above) made Golfweek’s top five list for best accessible courses in Alabama, I thought Oxmoor Valley (bottom photo, 3rd hole) was every bit as good and even more challenging.