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Pinehurst Resort | Forest Creek |
Pine Needles/Mid Pines |
The National
Legacy | Hyland Hills |
Foxfire |
Woodlake | Pine
Crest Inn
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Foxfire's
Light is Rekindling Brighter Than Ever
Not too long ago, the reputation of the
once-glorious Foxfire was plummeting about as fast as a golf
ball careening down a steep bank. The clubhouse and two Gene
Hamm golf courses grew ever shaggier under previous owners who
apparently thought maintenance was an unnecessary evil. And as
the grass grew longer, the modest membership grew thinner,
threatening to put Foxfire’s light out completely.
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One of Foxfire's
meticulously groomed holes
.
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Then, along comes Scottsdale-based Golf
Matrix, which bought the property out of bankruptcy in 1998.
Golf Matrix began at once to apply the financial bellows to
the smoldering coals. Breathing millions of dollars into the
site, including the clubhouse and the courses, the company has
begun to restore Foxfire’s class. As a result, Foxfire’s
old glory is coming back. It is definitely a place you should
not miss when you visit Pinehurst.
Foxfire is located six miles west of
Pinehurst village. The property includes a spanking new
clubhouse, the renascent courses, an inn and golf villas.
Homes, many with good sized lots, line the courses but their
modest number preserves the site’s uncrowded atmosphere.
Foxfire Red and Foxfire Grey (renamed by
the company) are two outstanding courses designed in the
classic tradition. What you see here is what you get, and what
you get are two layouts that Donald Ross himself would have
applauded. Furthermore, with the improvements Golf Matrix has
made, the courses are even better than when the original 18
opened in 1968. Two additional nines were built in 1972 and
1974 when the layouts were configured differently than they
are today.
Foxfire Red, the 6742-yard (from the back)
130-slope (6333 yards from the middle) layout has brand new
greens outfitted in G-6, a recently developed strain of bent
that is more disease-resistant and more quickly self-repairing
than G-2. The natural areas and the fairways have likewise
undergone a redressing under the Arizona golf management
company. In time, these putting surfaces, already excellent
now, will be truly outstanding.
Foxfire Grey, a slightly longer but equally
scenic route through pines, holly and hickory trees, and other
native vegetation, has an older strain of bent. Like the Red
course, Foxfire Grey has had a comprehensive make-over. The
sand in all of the bunkers is totally consistent and comes
from the same source as the sand at Augusta. The natural areas
are excellently groomed, the fairways are maintained
precisely. (Remember to call before your visit as conditions
vary according to the superintendent’s schedule.)
Foxfire Grey sits on one of the highest
points in Moore County. The back 9 has a few homes but you get
the feeling of wilderness on this 9, which has one fine hole
after another. The 518-yard (from the back) 13th, for example,
is a terrific risk-reward hole that doglegs slightly around an
environmental area and water to an elevated green that sits
atop a shelf with a steep incline off to the right and sand
left. From the green, you can look over the dense forest
towards the east in the direction of Pinehurst. Using a little
imagination, you could well envision settlers in buckskin and
wagons roaming this untamed-looking and wondrously beautiful
landscape.
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View toward a
green and one of several lakes at Foxfire
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Foxfire Red has a few more homes along its
fairways but it also has a remote feel to it. In a design
worthy of being a model for would-be golf designers, the
course deftly mixes doglegs with straight holes, long with
short par 4’s, and strong par 3’s over forested terrain of
elevation changes and lakes. Among a slew of outstanding holes
offering "pure" golf, the 12th is remarkable for its
awesome length and appearance. To make the hole, it was as if
the designer took a giant razor and shaved a route through the
trees like a barber shaving the head of a new Army enlistee.
The 573 yarder (552 from the whites) is virtually surrounded
by trees. From an elevated tee box you drive obliquely over a
portion of the lake that guards the green of the previous hole
to an upwardly sloping fairway. The fairway levels out
somewhat at about 300 yards and then makes a slow upward push
to the green wrapped in trees and colorfully bunkered.
Putatively, Curtis Strange is the only golfer to hit this
green in two from the back tee. With two career shots, some
golfers could do it from the forward tees.
Foxfire has the distinction of being the
club where E. Harvie Ward was the head professional. His
tenure started in the early 1970s and ended with his
retirement in 1982. Today, the septuagenarian continues to
give occasional lessons and play with friends at Pinehurst #2
and Forest Creek, where he is a member. A native of Virginia,
Ward moved to Tarboro, N.C., early on and went to Chapel Hill,
becoming the nation’s top amateur golfer. In a career of
stunning achievements, Ward finished fourth in the '57 Masters
and was a cinch to become a top professional golfer. But
financial opportunity came to him in the form of a partnership
in a San Francisco auto business and he spent many years in
California before returning to his adopted state of North
Carolina. The clubhouse of Foxfire is adorned with pictures of
the great Ward.
A long time designer with distinguished
credential, Hamm has said that his original 18 at Foxfire was
among his best work. Having played both courses, I would
elaborate and say that Foxfire’s two courses deserve to be
ranked among his best. You will not be disappointed with these
tracks. Play them and enjoy!
Members and those staying at Foxfire's accommodations have access to
Beacon Ridge Golf Club featuring another Gene Hamm design that is shorter but not less challenging.
For more information, call
1-800-736-9347. 
Click On A Course Below To Continue:
Pinehurst
Resort | Forest
Creek | Pine
Needles/ Mid Pines | The
National
Legacy
| Hyland
Hills | Foxfire
| Woodlake
| Pine
Crest Inn
Pinehurst
Area 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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