COURSE REVIEWS
Kastle Greens Golf Club:
Spicy Variety In The Country
By Jeffrey
A. Rendall,
TravelGolf.com Senior Writer
Images courtesy Keith Paton and Kastle Greens
MIDLAND, VA - If varietys the spice of life, than Kastle Greens Golf Club rates at least Cayenne Pepper. Set in the rustic countryside of Midland, Virginia, Kastle Greens presents enough great golf hole variety to please even the most finicky of golfers. The club prides itself on having an open, Scottish links style front nine and a plantation style back nine, but merely dividing the course in half doesnt completely account for the tremendous variety found throughout. Virtually every hole is unique.
There really isnt a lot about the club or its surroundings that would fit squarely into the usual category when you think about golf courses. It lies unobtrusively amongst working farmsand was farmland prior to its conversion to a golf course two and a half years ago. Kastle Greens cart hut is a barnliterally, and a quick glance at it makes you wonder whether there still might be livestock in there. Theres also a pair of concrete silos standing adjacent to the structure. Its all part of the propertys charm--the country theme works very well.
Further, you wont find Kastle Greens course designers name amongst the leading money winners on the all-time PGA tour list, or even as a member of the Golf Course Architects of America. Designed and built by Gary Cordova of Brothers Homes, the layout shows remarkable diversity in shot values for an amateur architects first project. Theres no doubt that Cordovas time spent studying golf course architecture for the project was used wisely.
All in all, you might say Kastle Greens is rather unusual.
But thats a good thing. You wont find it astride an
interstate highway, and youll have to look hard to make
the correct turns on the country two laners to get there, but
you wont be disappointed when you arrive. Add the fact that
the course is virtually unknown, and its a golf oasis in
a sea of commonality. Even the short drive onto the property defies
your typical introduction to a country clubyou see mounds
and links to the left and a Scottish castle to the forefront.
Brian Metzger, Kastle Greens Head Golf Professional, says he wants the good times at the course to begin as soon as you enter the clubhouse. We want golfers, when they come here, to experience a friendly, down-home type environment from the moment they walk through that door. And I want them to leave feeling theyve just played a wonderful layout. I want them to enjoy their day, not just out on the course, but also inside the pro shop, or over at the bar and grill.
As you might expect from a course in the country, the staff was quite accommodating. We even got to meet the owner. Kastle Greens is a family-run operation, and guests in the clubhouse are treated like a memberof the family. Its all a terrific prelude to playing the course.
We chose to walk the links, since the layouts pretty flat and the greens are near the next holes tees. Metzger says walking is allowed, if not encouraged, at all times except during weekend primetime when carts are required to keep things moving. Walking the course enhanced the links style feel of the frontit felt like playing the game the way Old Tom Morris did back in Scotland at Saint Andrews. The only thing missing was gorsebut give it time, and perhaps thatll evolve too. If theres a knock on the course at all, its the fact it doesnt appear fully matured. The greens were aerated prior to our visit, so we certainly cant hold that against them. But the rough areas were fairly clumpy and uneven. Being so new, its a telltale sign of a course that needs time to grow in. Once that happens, itll be something special.
The round begins with two lengthy par fours, 410 and 458 yards respectively. There doesnt appear to be a single tree on either hole, giving the view from the first tee a definite links style feel. Mounds are prevalent on both sides of the fairwaysand although it looks wide-open, the landing areas seem relatively narrow. Thankfully, there isnt a single fairway bunker on either hole to avoid.
The first two links also introduce Kastle Greens large putting surfacesanother allusion to Scottish style play. In addition, there are generous landing areas in front of the greens, allowing for bump up shots. The complete links style package.
Number three presents the first real nerve tester. The courses
#2 handicap hole, youre teeing over water to a peninsula
fairway210 yards of carry from the back tees. Not only must
you carry water, you need to be accurate or flirt with wetlands
on both sides. The challenge becomes less severe from the other
three sets of tees, and thats very much true throughout
the coursenothing unfair about it if you play the correct
set.
The second shot on #3 requires a lay-up for most players, because the greens protected by a large oak tree to the front right. Going at it in two calls for a high fade with a fairway wood to a slightly elevated greennot the easiest shot for most mid to high handicappers. Safe play is a mid-iron to a generous landing area, giving yourself a short iron into the large green.
There are several other excellent, thought-provoking holes on the front nine, but in the interest of space well jump to number nine. Some holes are doglegsthis holes like a boomerang. From the tee, you see water down the left side, and as you glance to the extreme left, you see the ninth green.
Metzger says its 265 yards from the back tees to the center of the peninsula greenall carryand theres water long as well as short. Some might call it a risk-reward, but unless you can hit a tee ball at least 260 yards in the air, then stop it quickly--well call it mostly risk, unlikely reward. An interesting hole thoughif your tee balls not far enough on the safe fairway side, youre still in trouble with your second shotbringing an awful lot of water into play for the approach.
On the back nine youll find quite a few more trees, but
the course is still pretty open. Number thirteen is the shortest
par four on the course at 340 yards from the tipsand without
a single bunker on the holeyoure thinking gift birdie
at best and par at worst. It can bebut it all hinges on
the tee shot. With woods on both sides of the fairway and some
tree limbs seemingly hanging over the rough areas, it calls for
you to thread the needle to make the short stuff. You can play
it safe with a long iron off the tee, but youll leave yourself
a longer iron into a narrow green with a big hump in the center.
Gamblers paradise.
Fourteen is the courses #1 handicap hole, a 572 yard monster par five that requires a precise tee shotnot just to land safely, but to give your second shot a good angle through a narrow chute to set up a less difficult third into another large green.
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Much variety to go around, from the first hole through the last. Some target holes, some wide-open holes, some short holes, and some long holes. Its quite a golfing smorgasbord. Kastle Greens will certainly singe your golf palletor true variety isnt spicy at all.
Kastle Greens Golf Club
11446 Rogues Road
Midland, VA 22728
Phone: (540) 788-3144
Fax: (540) 788-4416
www.kastlegreens.com
Email: kggolf@erols.com
Head Golf Professional: Brian Metzger, USGTF
Blue Tees: 6,734, Slope 132
White Tees: 6,360, Slope 130
Gold Tees: 5,521, Slope 125
Red Tees: 5,331, Slope 122
Rates (Regular Season):
Weekdays, including cart, is $34. Twilight (starts at two): $28
Weekends, including cart, is $44. Twilight (starts at two): $36.
Twilight is unlimited play.



