Gold tees 6036 yards, 69.6, slope 124
Orange tees 5797 yards, 74.4, slope 138
Set on the north of the estuary of the River Dovey in the natural beauty of the Snowdonia National Park in west Wales, Golf was reputedly played here in the 1880s by Arthur Ruck, an infantry officer,. He used Aberdovey Common, an area of ground between the railway and the sea and planted nine flower pots as holes. Among his playing partners was Bernard Darwin, the grandson of the great naturalist who would holiday with his Welsh grandmother. She did not play golf but gave the club its motto - an old Welsh proverb 'if you can't be strong, be cunning' which perfectly encapsulated the course. Bernard went on to be an acclaimed golf writer but never lost his love for Aberdovey which he wrote was 'the course that my soul loved best of all the courses in the world'. Several famous golf architects have shaped the course including Herbert Fowler, Harry Colt and James Braid, making it into the iconic links it is today.
The second green with the railway in the background |
We played Aberdovey with Lynn and David Lawson on a sunny day with a strong easterly wind. Like a classic links course it runs more or less straight out and straight back in, with a small zig zag at the turn, much like the Old Course at St Andrews. With the prevailing wind being west to south-west it will normally be behind the golfer on the way out and against on the way in, leading perhaps to a false sense of security at the start of the round! It lies on a narrow strip of land between the railway and sand dunes and reminded us of Brancaster or Goswick.
The third green is over a large dune, hence the name Cader |
The par 3 12th |
Worth playing? Definitely - it is links heaven.
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