DTG Golf July 2015 | Page 14

Bolton Landing

The third is a very demanding, 217-yard par-three that plays slightly uphill. Don’t miss the green to the right or you will find yourself in deep trouble in the form of woods and a massive bunker.

I really like the stretch of holes five through eight. They make you think out each shot and use pretty much every club in the bag. The fifth is a 380-yard par-four where I usually hit a cautious driver to the edge of a pond, which leaves me with a short iron into an elevated green. The sixth is a super par-five that plays only 495 yards from the tips. After a good tee shot I’m left with a choice: Go for the green in two with a fairway wood or lay up to around 100 yards and attack with a wedge. For me the play is usually always to go for this green on the second shot but you have to be careful. There’s water to the right of the green approach and a bothersome tree on the left side that I have been behind way too many times, leaving me to try and poke something under the branches and run a shot onto the green.

The sixth may indeed be the best hole on the course. It’s a 425-yard par-four that bends dramatically uphill and to the left. I’ll hit a driver and hug the left side near the woods in order to have the ball roll down a hill and into the fairway. It’s at least a club extra on the approach and you had better not hit it right (woods) or short (deep trap).

The 10th is another visually attractive hole. Your drive will settle on a hill overlooking the remainder of the fairway and putting surface tucked in a hollow below.

While the seventh hole may be the best Ross designed for The Sagamore Golf Course, the fourth is probably the most demanding. I considered it one of the highlights of my golfing career when I laced a tee shot over a hill to a fairway that lies beyond and is circled by water right and front and woods left. I still had a fairway wood left and I crushed a shot to the elevated green, leaving a 40-foot putt from the left side. Rolling the putt in for a birdie made me feel as if I had just scored a hole-in-one, only that it took me three shots instead of one.

The 16th is another nice, short par-four. It plays just 366 yards from the back but the tee shot has to be struck well enough to reach the top of a rise to leave an unfettered approach into an elevated green that sits across a stream.

The Sagamore plays quite differently during various seasons. In spring, when the course is wet from the receding snowpack or rains, it plays much longer than its 6,800 yards (par 70). During the summer and fall, the course is in mint condition and drives will roll out, leaving you much shorter approach shots.

Being a great, or even a good, golfer isn’t a prerequisite for enjoying The Sagamore. Immersing oneself in the natural beauty through which many of the holes are routed, and letting the genius of Ross sink in as you face decision after decision is reward enough. By the way, legend has it that Ross imported heather from his native Scotland to plant along some of the holes. The Sagamore has been compared by some as the equal or better than such Ross notables in the region as Oak Hill and Salem country clubs.

The Sagamore is located a half an hour from Albany, two hours from New York City, and three hours from Boston. Other sporting amenities at the resort include tennis courts; an indoor recreation center; boating; sailing; and swimming.

The Sagamore

Bolton Landing, N.Y. on Lake George

866-385-6221

www.TheSagamore.com

The 18-hole Sagamore Golf Course commands stunning views of Lake George and was designed and built under Donald Ross's personal supervision in 1928. In classic Ross fashion, The Sagamore Golf Course uses the natural environment to give each hole its challenge and beauty. The holes are routed naturally through an upland meadow and the Adirondack woods, where white birches enliven the evergreen forest.

14 DTGGolf Summer 2015