COURSE
REVIEWS
Nothing Mickey
Mouse
About Falcons
Fire Golf Club
By Kiel Christianson,
Senior Writer
KISSIMMEE, FL (Dec. 15, 2001) So maybe youre on a family vacation in Disney World. And maybe the kids, God love em, are getting on your nerves just a bit. And maybe, just maybe, the artificiality and obscene prices of Disney World are getting on your nerves more than just a little. What you need is some adult entertainment and we dont mean those naughty bars in Orlando or the beer garden in Epcot. What you need is golf.
Yes, there are courses right on the Disney property that cater to folks in just this predicament (see www.OrlandoGolf.com for reviews of the Disney courses). However, if you happen to want to take a stand against Prince Mickey and his evil minions and escape Disney Underworld for an all-too-brief round, other options do exist. In fact five courses lie just outside the Disney property, the closest of which is Falcons Fire Golf Club in Kissimmee. This Rees Jones design is no more than a 15-minute cab ride from most of the Disney hotels, and best of all, it offers a blessed respite from the insipid cuteness of Disney.
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Opened in 1993, Falcons Fire Golf Club is a strictly public course (making the Club part of the name a bit puzzling), which caters to both tourists and local clientele. Both winter rates ($130 with cart) and summer rates ($75) are below the local average, and playing conditions and amenities are every bit the equal of the more expensive courses in the area (including those run by cartoon characters). The salmon-pink, Spanish-style clubhouse is exquisitely appointed, and the food in the Falcons Nest Restaurant is both better and less expensive than Mickeys fare.
Falcons Fires pro shop has been voted one of the top 100 in the U.S. several years by GSO Magazine. The course and facilities have also been awarded 4 Stars by Golf Digest, and the 1999 Apex Award as one of Americas top tournament facilities. Accordingly, the course has played host to the Oldsmobile Scramble National Finals as well as the Senior PGA Tour Regional Qualifying Tournament from 1993-2001.
With respect to the layout itself, course architect Rees Jones, who has become one of the most respected golf course architects in the business over the last several years, displays his proclivity for dramatic bunkering. And in order to make the flat, rather non-descript parcel of land more appealing to the eye, Jones excavated several ponds and used the earth to create mounding that is nearly over the top. Quite frankly, I havent seen so many humps since my neighbors dog attached himself to my leg.
There is a purpose to this seemingly reckless use of earth-moving equipment, however; the mounding creates rather player-friendly fairways, the sloped edges of which tend to keep errant tee shots in play by funneling all but the most dramatic slices and hooks back toward the short grass. Sean, an assistant golf pro at Falcons Fire, was quick to point this out: The course is very forgiving off the tee, despite all the water. It has a resort-course feel to it.
Dont take this the wrong way, though: This falcon has a tendency to swoop down and peck at you mercilessly. The Bermuda grass rough grabs at your irons, so even though the rough doesnt look deep, it causes severe trouble. And, as noted by the assistant pro, theres water on 11 holes, including the 163-yard 15th, which is named Watery Grave for a very good reason.
Perhaps the
most difficult
aspect of the
course
at least for
this Michigander
used to bent
grass greens
were
the Bermuda
greens. Bermuda
is tough enough
to putt on if
youre
not used to
it, but to make
matters even
worse, the greenskeepers
at most Southern
courses overseed
with rye grass
during the winter
months. Bermuda
grass goes dormant
and turns brown
in winter, rye
grass stays
green. So although
the smallish
greens at Falcons
Fire were verdant,
they were also
extremely grainy
and slow. Again,
this isnt
a problem if
one is used
to putting on
non-bent grass
surfaces. But
if youre
not, be prepared.
In fact, this
overseeding
process results
in a completely
different course
in the winter
as opposed to
the summer,
according to
another assistant
pro.
At 6,901 yards from the tips with a 138 slope rating, Falcons Fire offers challenges for players at all skill levels. The first four holes are pretty simple, though, and allow you plenty of time to warm up. And youll need the warm-up to tackle the hardest hole on the course: the 453-yard, par-4 5th.
At the 5th,
players tee
off over scrub
to a fairway
framed by bunkers
left and right.
The fairway
itself rolls
and drops several
times as it
doglegs slightly
left, then gently
back to the
right. And even
if you avoid
the bunkers
and find a not-too-gnarly
patch of rough,
youre
likely to have
a wicked uphill,
downhill or
sidehill lie
on one of the
dozens of mounds
lining this
(and every)
fairway. The
rather dowdy
green is a bit
of a let down,
though
small, flat,
and round.
The front nine is solid, but has one short par 5 and only one long par 4 (the 5th). The back is more memorable. The 394-yard 13th is a very tricky cape hole, curving right around a lake. The glinting blue water tempts you to bite as much as possible off the yardage, but accuracy is key here. Over a dozen deep and decidedly unfriendly bunkers line the far side of the narrow fairway, so anything long is trouble. And anything short is wet.
From 13 on, the course really comes into its own. The 550-yard 14th is the first wild looking hole (except for the expressway to the left). Here, water runs from tee to green on the right, and the green is tucked coyly behind a sinister marsh. Here, as throughout the track, youre likely to see green herons, egrets, ospreys, and sand hill cranes. The 366-yard 16th features water to the right, water to the left, and a greenside bunker larger than the green itself.Finally, the brawny 464-yard, par-4 18th leads you down an ever-narrowing fairway toward the green, behind which rises the gorgeous clubhouse, leaving golfers with a richly satisfying, country club feeling.
The country club atmosphere is strengthened by the impeccable service, which includes free valet parking and a locker room on par with any private club. Head Pro Jim Underdown stresses his staffs commitment to service and quality: Even though its difficult to compete with Disney, once people know about us, they choose to come back here again and again. Falcons Fire will also be the preferred golf course of the new Gaylord Palms Resort Hotel (nee Opryland Hotel, due to open in February 2002), so it will have its own pool of tourists to draw from.
Underdown isnt
kidding about
the difficulty
of competing
with Disney.
When I came
to the lobby
of my Disney
Underworld resort
looking for
a cab to Falcons
Fire, Mickeys
handmaidens
were all smiles
and pleasantries
until
I said I wasnt
playing a Disney
course. As soon
as they found
this out, they
turned before
my eyes from
Cinderella into
Evil Stepmother.
But a round
of solid golf
at Falcons
Fire is worth
the mad dash
out of the stultifying
contrivance
of Disney any
day. It just
might give you
the strength
to go back and
face your family
and that
six-foot tall,
falsetto-voiced
rat again.
Falcons
Fire Golf Club
3200 Seralago
Blvd.
Kissimmee, FL
34746
Head PGA Pro:
Jim Underdown
Tel: 407-329-5445
Web: http://www.falconsfire.com/welcome.htm
Par: 72
Turf: Bermuda
grass tee to
green, overseeded
with rye grass
during the winter
Yardage: 6901
(gold), 6473
(blue), 6080
(white), 5417
(red)
Slope: 138,
132, 125, 126
Rating: 73.8,
71.7, 69.9,
71.6
Rates: Peak
season (winter)
$130; Off season
(summer) $75
Other information:
no walking allowed;
full restaurant
and banquet
facilities;
corporate outings
welcomed; fantastic
practice area
(range, two
putting greens,
short game area)
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