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Describing Royal Ashdown Forest Golf Club’s Old Course in 1934, Bernard Darwin wrote “two salient facts come to mind. It is not quite like any other of my acquaintance, and secondly, I never knew anyone who played on it and was not fond of it.” Over 80 years later and little has changed. Here is a course designed by nature yet still ranked as one of the top 100 courses in the British Isles. Famous for having no bunkers, its reputation as a true test of golf is undiminished thanks to uncontrived hazards of heather, narrow fairways, hollows and streams. Originally open heathland, trees from the forest have seeded, grown and matured to make accurate golf even more of a premium requirement as well as adding to its natural beauty. By comparison with some modern developments the course could be considered short, yet because of the exacting challenge it presents to even the best golfers, the Old Course has been selected by the R&A as an Open Championship Regional Qualifying venue. It also hosted the amateur international match between England and Spain in 2007 and the Ladies' British Open Amateur Stroke Play Championship in 2011. In 2016 the Old Course will stage the McGregor Trophy (English Boy's Under 16 Open Amateur Stroke Play Championship) for the first time. So, what is it that makes the course so special that even famed architects such as Harry Colt were inspired by it? An example is the difficulty of the island 6th. Then there’s the 11th where you stand on an elevated tee with glorious views of the North Downs and stare down at a 249 yard par 3.
The West was once the longest ladies’ golf club in England. It was originally founded as the Ashdown Forest & Tunbridge Wells Ladies Golf Club in 1889, barely six months after the formation of the main club and was only the second of its type to be formed in Great Britain, after Sunningdale Ladies. In 1932 the course was lengthened to 18 holes, the same year that the ladies’ club was awarded Royal status in own own right. Since then it has gone through a number of alterations and now welcomes players of both sexes yet still remains of sufficient quality to be awarded Golf World magazine’s prestigious accolade as the UK’s best course under 6,000 yards in 2013. Former Ashdown member, golf architect and writer, Frank Pennink wrote of the West Course, "There are some really splendid holes and not a single poor one. To find a green demands often an exacting accuracy, but a green missed, a ball is generally easy to find, though not necessarily easy to put close to the hole." Whereas banks of heather, gorse and thick rough help defend the Old Course in the absence of bunkers, the West is an altogether tighter challenge with narrow tree-lined fairways and small, often elevated greens with some fiendish run offs. Today the West Course is open to golfers and Societies of all handicaps. Its attraction is that tee time availability, even at weekends, is rarely a problem and there are a number of attractive promotional green fees on offer. Three and fourballs and Societies are all welcome even at weekends. Golf writer Frank Pennink's belief that the West Course could equal the reputation of the Old, in a different way, is now a reality as more discover its charm and true test of golf.
1 Cantelupe Artisans Golf Club
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10 Chartham Park Golf Club
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11 Crowborough Beacon Golf Club
1 course