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Bear
Trap Dunes | Lighthouse
Sound | Rum
Pointe | Eagles
Landing
Ocean
City Golf & Yacht Club | River
Run | Ocean City Introduction
Eagles
Landing is a Beauty With Talons
When the wind whips up off Sinepuxent Bay,
this Ocean City-owned daily fee golf course can be as imposing as,
well, an eagle about to pounce on its prey. But the challenge
is no less apparent than the beauty of the setting along the
bay’s salt marshes and in the upland areas dotted with ponds
ringed with such ornamental grasses as miscanthus, love grass,
and blue stem.
Located next to the municipal airport on
Maryland Route 611 in Berlin, Md., just across the Route 50
bridge from Ocean City, Eagles Landing opened in 1991, within
a few months of the opening of two other area courses, The
Beach Club and River Run.
The course site was purchased through
federal grants and was part of the tract designated for the
Ocean City airport directly adjacent to it. The land, a former
farm, was a buffer for the airport and not zoned for
commercial development. The city saw an opportunity for it.
At the time, Tom Perlozza was director of
the city Parks and Recreation Department, which spearheaded
the project on behalf of the city. He said that the timing was
ripe in the early 1990s for Ocean City to develop the course
because other courses were beginning to open, and the city saw
the project as a way to "jump start the economy for golf
locally." Also, he said, Eagles Landing was intended to
help capture the so-called "shoulder season" markets
(spring and fall), as well as the regular summer influx of
golfing tourists.
Michael Hurzdan was selected to design the
course because of his experience developing courses in New
England on land that was similarly environmentally sensitive,
according to Perlozza, who has since become executive director
of Ocean City Golf Getaway, the packaging and promotional arm
of area member golf clubs. Eagles Landing from the beginning
made environmental protection a top priority, and as a result
soon after it opened it earned National Audubon Sanctuary
certification.
Eagles Landing is justifiably one of the
area’s most popular courses, both because of its setting and
because it is a fine course for the mid-level price. The
greens are of bent grass and the fairways are a mixture of rye
and Bermuda. The root system and leaves of these species give
the fairways a very different texture and playing conditions
from the tighter bent grass fairways at Lighthouse Sound and
Rum Pointe.
Eagles Landing stretches from a very modest
4896 yards to 7003 yards, where the par-72 layout has a slope
of 126. It is a combination links-style and marshland style
design, offering a wide variety of hole lengths and
configurations around the ponds and salt marshes. The upland
meadows and marshes offer a rich visual texture as well as an
additional hazard.
Eagles Landing starts out fairly innocently
with some straight-forward holes that weave back and forth in
the uplands. The site was originally barren of any trees and
the course was planted with sweet gum, maples and tulip
poplars to enhance the visuals. There is also a large waste
bunker separating holes 4 and 5. At #6, the course comes to
life. This hole is a 435-yard (from the tips) challenge that
curves left around a pond to a pondside green. Bunkers right
of the landing area mean golfers should stay on their toes off
the tee, and the biggest decision is how much of the dogleg to
cut off.
Holes 7-10 are set closer to the bay on and
around the tidal marshes festooned with spartina grass and
other species in the transition zones. The holes are also
enclosed by pines and oaks, with a few maples thrown in,
giving the course at this juncture a woodland feel. Hole #7 is
an almost 90-degree dogleg par 5 presenting two forced carries
over tidal marshes. From the tee the landing area is partially
obscured by the tall marsh grasses. The chute through the
trees seems impossibly narrow. After a good tee shot, you
almost certainly have to lay up short of another marsh that
lies in front of the slightly elevated green. After a short
par 3 with a large bail-out left at #8, golfers must once
again thread the needle through the trees and over marsh to
land safely at the medium-length par 4 9th. After a
safe tee shot, you are left with a short approach over yet
another marsh.
A salt pond grown high with marsh grass
plays a major role in the very short par 4 10th of
330 yards. It cuts deep into the fairway from the right. Its
tall grass obscures the landing area behind it, and gives the
impression that the pond can’t be carried. However, this is
not the case, as a reasonably well struck tee shot will have
no trouble carrying the pond. The alternative is lay up of the
pond with a mid to short iron, but that leaves golfers with a
very difficult shot over the marsh grass to a hidden green.
Holes 11-16 are laid out in the uplands
marked again by ponds and upland marshes. The fine long par 4
11th requires a tee shot over a marsh to a landing
area bound on the right by large fairway bunkers and entirely
down the left side by the same marsh. The green sits slightly
elevated and at a short distance left of a pond.
The course ventures back toward the bay and
tidal areas with #17 and 18. The 17th is a fine
medium-length par 3 over a marsh to a large, relatively flat
green. The design of the 18th is a bit unnatural,
due to the configuration of the marshland. On this 390-yard
hole, one would normally hit a driver or 3-wood. But a portion
of the marsh cuts across the fairway at about 240 yards out,
making a lay-up a necessity. This artificially lengthens the
hole extending the approach shot considerably. The approach on
this pretty woods enshrouded hole is to a long and narrow
green.
The tee sheet fills up fast on this most
popular Ocean City area course, so it pays to make
reservations well ahead of time.
For tee times, call, 1-800-283-3846.
Click On A Course Below To Continue:
Bear
Trap Dunes | Lighthouse
Sound | Rum
Pointe | Eagles
Landing
Ocean
City Golf & Yacht Club | River
Run | Ocean City Introduction
_______________
Alan B. Nichols is
a professional golf-travel writer residing in Bethesda, MD.
He is the featured golf-travel writer
for GolfLink. Alan appreciates your
comments on his features and the courses he has written
about.
E-MAIL ALAN NICHOLS

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