Description
Down a curving driveway, shaded by vineyard oaks
and evergreens limited in height by the prevailing
Atlantic winds, you will come to a special place,
Farm Neck Golf Club. You’ll find an unprepossessing
proshop, accompanied by a small members’ locker
room (they have a limited membership) and a very
casual restaurant. It’s understated, but elegant,
from the design of the scorecards and signage, to
the shaded putting greens, to the wide open first
fairway—it almost lulls you into a sense of
calm.
But beware: this is a course that will test you
many times over the hours of your round. Enjoy;
inhale the beauty; but do not underestimate your
seductive foe.
Head pro Mike Zoll presides over a friendly staff
that is highly attuned to customer service. Farm
Neck opened with nine holes in 1979, added the second
nine a year later, and has garnered fans ever since.
The highly varied—yet cohesive—design
is the cumulative work of Geoffrey Cornish, Bill
Robinson, and Patrick Mulligan.
Do you love golf-as-a-setting? If so, you’ll
enjoy Farm Neck.
The course offers 4 sets of tees, playing a demanding
6815 (72.6/133) from the golds, a challenging 6301
(70.2/131) from the blues, 5859 (69.3/129) from
the whites, and 4987 (64.3/118) from the reds. 129
slope at 5859 yards? What does that mean? It means
this course, while offering usually generous landing
areas, really places a premium on course management.
Water is threatening, or in play, on nine of the
holes, and deep bunkers also punish those whose
aspirations overreach their abilities.
First of all, the course is a visual delight, with
many holes running along the Vineyard Sound, and
others running through meadows and marshes, with
water, sand, wetlands, and wildlife keeping you
alert all day long.
A few of the most notable holes follow. After a
relatively wide and easy first hole, number two
immediately grabs your attention—a narrow
but short par 5 (490 yards blues, 528 golds). Miss
the fairway left and you’re in heavy rough
and blocked by trees and rolling hills. Miss right
and you risk OB on the road, and more tree blockage.
Yet a decent drive of 250 from the blues has to
thread the needle between a set of bunkers that
squeeze the fairway to about 22 yards in the center.
The green is perched on a small plateau—its
34-yard depth catches the high shots required because
it is well guarded by a deep trap in front. Some
players may reach the green in two, but given the
traps everywhere, scoring par here is just fine.
Number 4 (left, green at top) is one of the Farm’s
beauty holes. It's the shortest par 3 on the track
(157 blue, 178 golds), that often plays a club or
two longer or shorter depending on the wind. From
157, I’ve hit every thing from 5-iron to 9-iron.
The green is deep but narrow, and trees overhanging
from the left narrow the target, as does the drop-off
to the right into impenetrable bushes.
Number 7 is only 371 from the blues, (391 golds),
and plays downhill. A 310-yard drive reaches the
pond in front. Your view of the green as you come
to your approach shot is a tableau surrounded by
tall pines, with the rolling deep blue of the Vineyard
Sound in the background.
The second par 5 on the front, number 8, is visually
intimidating. Ocean on the right, trees on the left,
and a required carry of about 150 yards from the
whites, 180 from the blues, and 210 from the golds.
The best tee shot is down the middle or slightly
middle right, because if you make it over the marsh,
you then face a continuously narrowing slight dogleg
left, while the fairway tilts modestly toward the
right. Along the right are hedges and a drop-off
that dooms any errant shots. All of this, while
the breezes cross the fairway. Go for the green
in two at your own peril—a mound in front
deflects run-up attempts.
The front nine ends with an innocent-looking par
3 (Number 9, above looking back toward the tee)
guarded by a pond. But no matter what you’re
thinking, take an extra club because the prevailing
breeze is usually either in your face, or left-to-right
(towards the water).
Number 12 may be the toughest par on the course.
The tee shot on this downhill 379-yarder can be
no longer than about 230 to avoid the pond on the
left. (As another dogleg right, you are almost forced
left.) But this leaves a testy (all-carry) 150-170
yard shot to a narrow, double-tiered green with
little bailout on any side.
Fourteen may be the easiest hole on the back. This
331-yard slight dog left requires a down-the-middle
drive to set up a short shot to a deep green. This
hole provides another great view of the Sound, and
also means your shot is more exposed to the capricious
breezes. Gauge the wind carefully before selecting
your wedge.
Water: Beautiful, But Dangerous
Fifteen is not the longest par 3, but it requires
the most fortitude. All tee shots must carry the
pond which fronts and wraps around the green to
the right. In addition, the green slopes sharply
to the water, so a right side pin is to be ignored.
At 163 yards from the blues (188 from the tips),
a slightly drawing mid-iron will get you safely
home.
The finishing hole, the last of five in a row with
a pond in play, is an intriguing par 5 (523 blues,
552 golds) that eventually bends about 90 degrees
to the right. There’s an OB fence that curves
to the right, but marshland that catches straight
drives that carry more than 250 or so. So a long
fading tee shot might get you inside 200 yards,
but miss and you may wish you’d geared down
a bit. Thus the prudent player opts for a 3-wood
or long iron off the tee and a mid-iron second shot
to a comfortable pitching distance to set up the
third. Once you cross the final pond to this final
green, you’ll find several undulations that
can deflect even slightly mis-hit putts.
You can finally exhale, and reward yourself with
a nice cool beverage. Now that you’ve been
here, you’ll be back. Oh yes, you will come
back.

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