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Bear
Trap Dunes | Lighthouse
Sound | Rum
Pointe | Eagles
Landing
Ocean
City Golf & Yacht Club | River
Run | Ocean City Introduction
Ocean
City Golf & Yacht Club:
36 Beautiful Holes by the Bay
Located at South Point on Maryland Route
611 about a 20-minute drive from Ocean City, the semi-private
member-owned Ocean City Golf & Yacht Club comprises the
Seaside Course and Newport Bay. Seaside, which is a misnomer
since it isn’t anywhere near the ocean, is shorter and more
open. It’s especially designed for "a free
swinger," according to the club brochure. Newport Bay,
the club’s signature layout, is a tad tighter and
considerably longer, perfect for the "precision
golfer."
Ocean Golf & Yacht is the oldest golf
club in Ocean City. The original 9-hole course, located just
across the bay from Ocean City on what is now known as
"Captain’s Hill", opened in 1924 and closed in
1936 when it was converted to a residential community.
Left without a place of their own, some
members got their golfing fill by joining Rehobeth Country
Club, a 30-minute jaunt up the new coastal highway. Still, the
desire for a club in the OC-Berlin area was a flame that never
flickered. Several sites were investigated including an old,
unused farm at South Point. Sending its produce to market in
scows that tied up at docks right on the property, the
600-acre farm was divided into roughly equal parts of
woodlands, open farmland, and marshland. The purchase was made
in 1957 and construction on the original 18 began in April
1958.
William Gordon & Son of Doylestown,
Pa., was selected to design and build the course. The new club
started with 100 members, but that number virtually doubled
overnight when the new course officially opened May 29, 1959.
Since then the membership doubled again. A third nine was
added in 1971, and a fourth opened in 1984, creating two
18-hole courses. In 1996, Lester George redesigned Bayside,
and the revised layout, renamed Newport Bay, opened in 1998.
In his remake, George added length and
bunkers, and replanted the greens with bent, but he preserved
Newport Bay’s magnificent natural features. Weaving through
the forest oaks, willows and birch and playing out along the
wide marshes on the north side of the property, Newport Bay
presents a delightful menu of holes--doglegs and straight
holes, short and long--and all cast in a setting that will
have you peering around and above to catch glimpses of
wildlife and the splendid scene's rich photographic
opportunities.
It is also rich in golfing triumph and
tragedies. Designed for the option of being walked, the course
features a traditional layout devoid of contrivances, such as
large mounds and steep crevices and greens with slopes more
suited for miniature golf. The layout is as straight-forward
as they come.
Besides a couple of terrific short par 4’s,
Newport Bay has some fine par 3’s and par 5’s, including
the 485-yard 12th (525 from the back). A reachable hole for
the longer hitters, the hole demands precision. The tee shot
must carry a portion of the tidal marsh to a fairway that is
bisected at about the 340-yard mark by another finger of
marsh. The green is perched in between several sizable bunkers
and is backdropped by woods.
The 520-yard (535) 14th is perhaps the most
majestic hole on the course. On this slight dogleg right, it
moves inland out toward the marshes. An open marsh pond and
adjacent thick tidal vegetation lies to the right of the
fairway out about 450 yards, and stands ready to swallow shots
hit too far right. The green is directly along the marsh. The
course’s other two forced carries occur at the two finishing
holes, the stunning par 3 17th of 150 yards (175 from the
back) and the 340-yard (365) 18th. Both holes lie directly on
the water. The 17th green is one of the more sloped on the
course and is surrounded by sand. From it, you can look south
across the water and possibly see a single boat at anchor or a
house among the trees on the point on the other side.
From the tips, #18 requires a short carry
over a finger of marsh to a fairly wide fairway, from where
you are left with a mid to short iron into a fairly flat green
with a couple of bunkers. A large waste bunker runs down the
right side, and if wayward right shots don’t find the sand,
they are liable to wind up on the narrow rocky beach or in the
bay. With accuracy, the hole is not difficult, but it packs
some terrific views.
Like Eagles Landing, the fairways of
Bermuda have a looser texture than you will find on the bent
fairways at Rum Pointe or Lighthouse Sound. The greens are
bent and relatively small. They aren’t severely sloped or
contoured.
Because it offers superior golf at a
mid-level fee, Ocean City Golf & Yacht gets a considerable
amount of play. On your next visit to the Maryland shore, pack
your sticks and head on out there. You will be rewarded.
For tee times, call 1-800-442-3570.
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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