Omni Mount Washington Resort’s Mount Washington course is the rare friendly Ross
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Omni Mount Washington Resort’s Mount Washington course is the rare friendly Ross

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Earlier this year, I told you Mount Snow’s golf course was harder to play golf at than the mountain was to ski. Well, you don’t have to worry about that at Mount Washington Golf Resort. We've found a Donald Ross course that won’t beat you up worse than the mountain.

An Omni resort, the stately hotel has been a hot spot for jet-setters for decades, and who can blame them? Whether you’re here to explore Cannon Mountain, the resort-affiliated Bretton Woods or to take in all the summer activities the White Mountains have to offer, its reputation for cultured refinement has been unparalleled since it opened in 1902.

The setting is almost cathedral-like, with the white hotel gleaming brightly amidst the hunter green forest, a diamond in an emerald setting. God’s Country, indeed.

The golf course was built by Donald Ross in 1915 and was restored in 2008 by Boston-based architect Brian Silva. There is also a short nine-hole course designed by Alex Findlay (of Moraine Country Club fame) built in 1895 and restored by Geoffrey Cornish and Brian Silva in 1989.

Want more Mount Washington? Read Eric Hart’s “Moose-ing around on the Appalachian Trail”

The greatest compliment we can pay both the resort and Silva is that the course looks and plays like it did in 1915. That’s the hallmark of a great restoration: accuracy.

Now Ross was particularly fond of insidiously cunning green contours, severe false fronts, ferocious bunkers and steeply uphill, all-carry approach shots. Thankfully for the resort guests, Ross dialed it down a notch here. With the exception of one creek (at No. 9) and one wetlands (at No. 18), a bogey golfer could play their entire round with one ball. Better still, an expert golfer can grab a fork and knife and tear into the course like a steak dinner.

You know the old expression, “It’s a second-shot golf course?”

We all understand that to mean a course where you can spray the ball off the tee a bit, but accuracy is paramount -- indeed, critical -- on the approaches. But if you’ve ever wondered what the heck a “first-shot golf course” might look like, I present the Mount Washington course for your consideration. Seminole, Irondequoit, Pinehurst -- if you miss the green at any of those, and you’re 10-12 feet deep in a bunker, or 40 yards back down the fairway, pitching over a knoll. Miss the green at Mount Washington, and you might be looking at chipping in. There isn’t a lot of danger guarding the greens, and the putting surfaces are not as wildly contoured as at many Ross courses. Better still, frequently, the miss is short, another nod to bogey golfers and resort guests.

Instead, much of the interest at Mount Washington is off the tee.

The front nine is almost completely flat, but that does not mean it is without strategic interest. The routing is charming; the first four holes meander through randomly-sprinkled bunkers turned perpendicular to the line of play, so that golfers must play over or around them. Though they are all par 4s and all of a somewhat similar length, they all play in different directions. But there is a common theme that continues throughout: Avoid the bunkers off the tee, and you can fire at the flag. Put the ball in the fairway, and the worst of the hole is behind you.

Moreover, the course is relatively short. There are four sets of tees, and they come at odd distances:  7,004, 6,400, 5,700 and 5,300. From the 6,400-yard tees, there is only one par 4 over 400 yards, and the longest par 5 clocks in at 522. All three par 3s, however, measure between 186 and 204, though they all play differently: one flat, one uphill and one downhill. It's a nice mix.

Move down to the 5,700-yard tees, however, and the course becomes a pushover, with three par 4s under 300 yards and none longer than 395. From the 7,004-yard tips, obviously it’s more fearsome.

The best stretch on the golf course is Nos. 9-14. The ninth features a creek that bisects the fairway diagonally, forcing the player to play short to the left side or carry the stream on the right side. The back-to-back-par 5s at Nos. 10 and 11 ascend, then descend the highest point on the property. The 11th is particularly strategic with its S-shaped fairway swerving around bunkers.

No. 12 is an uber-short par 4s. At a paltry 313 yards (273 yards from the resort tees), you’ll have a short iron or wedge to the green, and even a drive sliced into the 11th fairway doesn’t get punished. It’s a breather after the back-to-back par 5s to start the side and the stern test of the ninth. But at Nos. 13 and 14, it’s back to serious strategic golf. No. 13 is one of the few holes that plays uphill; a diagonal fairway presents itself off the tee, then an approach to the green that requires a careful check of wind and yardage. The 14th is a gorgeous Reverse Redan, with the fairway and green sloping away from the player and steeply to the right.

One of the course highlights is the par-3 fifth, which turns the golfer directly into the shadow of the hotel, so close that you might catch a glimpse of the ghost of Princess Caroline Stuckney watching you through the windows of Room 314.

Just to debunk a myth — NO, Stanley Kubrick’s film adaptation of Stephen King’s "The Shining" was not filmed at the Omni, and the resemblance between the Omni and the Overlook Hotel in the movie is remote at best when you bother to notice that the Omni is pearl white and the Overlook (the Timberline Lodge in Mt. Hood, Ore., for those of you scoring at home), is slate grey. It doesn’t help when locals spread that myth knowing full well that it’s not true.

The hotel is haunted, however, by the ghost of Princess Caroline Stuckney. (Not to be confused with Princess Caroline of Monaco, the daughter of Grace Kelly.) When resort founder Joseph Stuckney died, Caroline married Prince Lucinge of France. Upon the prince’s death, she returned to live in Room 314 of the Omni. Often, her ghost is seen brushing her hair on the end of the bed in that room or looking out its balcony window at the golfers playing below. Guests staying in her room may even catch a hint of her perfume, or find the bathtub filling itself on its own. At least Ghost Hunters did.

In short, she may be the scariest thing about the golf course. Warm and welcoming fairways with bunkers featuring mild faces and open routes to most greens make for an enjoyable, low-impact round. The par 5s are all majestic showstoppers, especially when you stand on the sixth tee box and see Mount Washington wreathed in clouds in the distance behind the green and the fairway peppered randomly with bunkers.

The out-and-back routing, featuring just three par 5s and three par 3s never feels boring or monotonous as the course builds to a crescendo as the round progresses.

While in high season on weekends, greens fees can be as high as $130, while in shoulder season the rates drop dramatically to as low as $42 during the week — a solid bargain for what you get. The course bears more than a passing resemblance to the Links Course at Lake Placid Golf Resort, another course of Golden Age vintage in the shadow of one of America’s greatest ski resorts, the mighty Whiteface Mountain.

About the author

Jay Flemma

Starting with a blog and a dream, Jay Flemma launched his first sports-writing website in 2004. Some 13 years and 25 major golf championships later, Jay has won multiple national sports writing awards. Besides GNN, his work has appeared in numerous books as well as on-line at Cybergolf, PGA.com, GolfObserver, GolfChannel.com and many other sites and print magazines. When not trying to find a lost golf ball, Jay is an entertainment, copyright, Internet, sports and trademark lawyer in Manhattan. His clients have been nominated for Grammy and Emmy awards, won a Sundance Film Festival Best Director award, performed on stage and screen, and designed pop art for museums and collectors. Jay lives in Forest Hills, N.Y., and is fiercely loyal to his alma maters, Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts and Trinity College in Connecticut.