Day two at Black Mesa is history, and personal history was made

Written by: Tony Korologos | Monday, May 18th, 2009
Categories: GolfGolf CoursesGolf LifestyleHackersLifeTravel
Tags:

Today’s goal, break 80 at Black Mesa

The more I play Black Mesa the more I love it. This is a special golf course. I become more confident in my shots and where I want them to land or roll the more I play the course. I played probably the most solid nine holes of the year on the front today. I got up and down on #1 from a deep green side bunker. On #2, a short par-4, I used the contours to the right of the green to bounce my 100 yard approach shot to about three feet. But my putt didn’t drop as the speed was not as quick as I expected. That would be about the last bad putt I’d make for the whole day.

black mesa golf club
Above, the old squeeky windmill at Black Mesa. When the wind kicks up, the windmill plays a an eerie yet rhythmic tune.  Normally I’d dislike a sound like this, but this tune almost hypnotizes me. How many millions of times has that wheel spun around?  I need to find out if there’s been a name given to this windmill.  If there hasn’t, I’m going to come up with an appropriate one….

On with the story…

When I got to the mega cool #4 hole I was still even par. #4 is the famous “dome” hole, where a cool sand dome guards the green left. I didn’t trust my yardage. It dictated a six iron. I hit five. Good choice. It ended up about eight feet below the pin. I drained the putt to reach -1. I played solid golf the rest of the front nine. My new and improving short game and some great putting helped me turn to the back nine at even par. I shot even on the front at Black Mesa. That is good.  Could I hold it together for the difficult back nine?

I have shaky confidence in some holes which have kicked my butt every time I’ve played them, like the par-5 13th. Today I was cruising along playing well and 13 humbled me once again. I knew I couldn’t miss the green right or I’d have an impossible up and down from a very deep bunker. I missed right, 7. Ouch. I’m realizing how demanding this course is. You really can’t miss a single shot in the wrong place your you’ll have to make some incredible shots to save par. Usually errant shots will result in an “other” score. My two severely errant swings did result in double bogeys on the back.

Yesterday I melted down on the 15th, a beauty of a par three. I clanked my tee shot into the water and scored a double. I was wanting redemption today. With my good pal Eddie Peck, principal guy here at Black Mesa watching, I pulled a six iron left. The shot bounced off the contours left of the green and ran down to about five feet. I laughed and looked at Eddie and said, “I meant to do that.”  Eddie laughed.

Eddie took off to watch the other groups so he didn’t see the putt, which I drained. The first thing he asked me upon the conclusion of my round was if I made that putt. I proudly told him that yes I’d drained the putt, and that despite having my golf ship taking on heavy water on the back nine, I paddled home with a 78. To me a 78 on this course is like shooting a 73 somewhere else.

Puye Cliff Dwellings

Following the round we visited the Puye cliff Pueblo Indian ruins, about 30 minutes from Black Mesa Golf Club.  The Pueblo Indians had built an incredible set of dwellings on top of, and on the SIDE of, a cliff.  I’ll post more about this fascinating part of the trip later, but here’s an image of our tour guide (right) telling us about the dwellings for now.

I’m too tired to continue writing, though I’d love to share the rest of this great day…

Gnite.


Played Black Mesa today and it was awesome

Written by: Tony Korologos | Sunday, May 17th, 2009
Categories: GolfGolf CoursesSite NewsTravel
Tags:

I’m dead tired from a long day of traveling, playing Black Mesa and then the cocktail party, dinner and lounging in the hot mineral springs here in New Mexico. Yes it sucks, but someone has to do it.

Highlights of the round include making birdie on the 9th and the 16th. I almost aced the par-3 11th hole.

Must get some sleep so until I get more time to post, here are a couple of shots from today. First is the 17th hole, which I gagged, but it is a great view….

Next is the 18th green with the clubhouse in the background. The old squeaky windmill was playin’ some great music today.


I return to Black Mesa Golf Club, one of the finest golf courses on our planet

Written by: Tony Korologos | Friday, May 15th, 2009
Categories: Site News
Tags:

Over the last few years I’ve developed a great friendship with Eddie Peck, principal at Black Mesa Golf Club in New Mexico.  Eddie and I have shared many a great meal and smoked many cigars together and of course, played many rounds of golf at some great courses around the country from Ballyneal to the TPC Sawgrass.   As good as some of those courses are, Eddie’s Black Mesa is quite possibly the best course I’ve ever played.  I had the pleasure of playing the course a couple of years ago and I did a review which can be found here.

I’m excited to announce that I’m returning to Black Mesa this Sunday and I’ll be there through Wednesday.  I’ll be cramming in as many holes of golf on this world class Baxter Spann design when I’m not checking out the land which will soon be home for Black Mesa’s 2nd course, groundbreaking this summer.  The 2nd course will be designed by my favorite course designer, Tom Doak.  You may have heard of some of Doak’s previous projects like the aforementioned Ballyneal or the Doak course at Bandon in Oregon?  Yes, Spock.

Down and dirty at Black Mesa’s 2nd course, which breaks ground this summer…

I can’t announce anything quite yet about what I’m doing or what the arrangements will be, because there aren’t any yet.  But I’ve been in discussions with Eddie and his PR firm about being the official blog for the progress of the Doak course construction.  Naturally that would require the real tough gig that I be at BM numerous times over the two years, the time it will take to get the course built.  I’ll have to do a sit down or two with Tom Doak and pick his brain.  That won’t suck.

For good measure here’s another shot from Black Mesa for your enjoyment below.  You can access my Black Mesa Gallery here, which now has close to 300 images.


Black Mesa Golf Club Review

Written by: Tony Korologos | Wednesday, October 31st, 2007
Categories: Course ReviewsGolf CoursesGolf LifestyleGolf VideosMiscellaneousReviewsTravel
Tags:

When I used to think of New Mexico a few things came to mind. I’d think of nuclear testing and Indian reservations. I’d mostly think of Roswell, where the alien ship crashed in 1947. Golf certainly wasn’t on the radar, alien or domestic.

No longer do I think of aliens when I considering New Mexico (barring a certain alien face which I’ll mention later). Now the first thing that comes to mind is Black Mesa Golf Club in the town of La Mesilla, 30 minutes from Santa Fe.

black mesa golf club new mexicoDesign

Black Mesa’s architect is Baxter Spann, newest member of my exclusive “favorite golf course architects” list. This is a tough list to get on, since Tom Doak is the only other guy on the list.

I’m a big fan of courses whose designs fit the terrain. I’m not as big a fan of the “Earth mover” designs, who’s engineers seem to ignore the natural contours of the landscape and force their vision with tractors and dump trucks. Black Mesa’s native New Mexico desert terrain is a dream landscape which Baxter Spann brilliantly utilized and complimented. Black Mesa is a visual orgasm from virtually any point on the course, tee-fairway-green.

Not just your average set of tees

Many boring golf courses have one or two teeing areas where they place their multiple tee markers. The only difference between the markers is yardage, not angles or elevation. How many courses have you played with one tee box and three or four sets of tee markers who’s only difference is a few yards? Boring!

Black Mesa’s FIVE tees are far from boring. Each hole has several different tee areas which are not only different distances, they’re completely different angles and elevations. By playing different tees from one round to the next, you could be playing what seems like an entirely different course. Playing different tees makes all the angles to the fairway, or greens on par-3’s, different.

The par-3 fourth hole is a great example (see picture below). The black tee measures out at roughly 205-210 yards and has an elevated attack angle where you can see most of the green. The lower blue tee (or possibly an alternate for the black tee) is a good 40 yards left of 210 tee and is at about 175 yards. That 40 yard left difference is huge, since the angle of attack from there makes the back half of the green blind due to a conical badlands hill in front. A back left pin would be hidden from that angle.

black mesa golf club new mexico
The very cool fourth hole at Black Mesa with it’s conical badlands dome guarding the green.

Most of the holes at Black Mesa have these wonderful tee variations. For instance, the first hole provides a blind shot from the blue and black tees over a badlands hill. You need to use the aiming flag or the signal bunkers to align your shot. Yet if you move up to the front tees, you can see almost all of the fairway.

Fairways

Black Mesa’s fairways aren’t what I’d call tight. The landing areas are fairly wide, or at least they look wide when you’re standing ON them. The fairways don’t look that wide from the tee however. The visual effect of the fairway shaping, combined with the fairway bunkering and adjacent badlands makes them look very slim. There’s a real mental game you can play with yourself on each tee. You can try to decide just how much of the dogleg to cut off, knowing that an errant shot may result in a cactus sandwich or at worst a lost ball.

black mesa golf club new mexicoBunkers

Black Mesa’s fairway and green-side bunkers are rugged, ragged, rigorous and down-right rude! I’m a big fan of making bunkers actual hazards, like they’re supposed to be. Many golf courses make their bunkers too pristine and pretty. The lies are too sweet. On the PGA Tour these bunkers can actually be easier to play out of than the surrounding rough.

At Black Mesa the native grasses and plants can be found growing right into the rough edges of the bunkers. The grass around the bunkers is longer and more punishing than the rough. The bunkers are not unfair, but they do penalize bad shots which find them and bad shots made in an attempt to vacate them.

Approach

Like the tee areas at Black Mesa, the approaches of the greens present many options for the player. Many different, yet well executed shot selections may result in equally rewarding results. Most of the approaches allow the player to choose to fly it, run it or even putt it onto the green. The hills in and around the greens provide many attack angles for the player to bounce or deflect shots to the correct green location.

Some approach angles force the approach issue into the air via green-side bunkers, grass bunkers, hazards or badland areas. If you hit the wrong part of the fairway your positioning may dictate the type of approach shot you’ll need to hit.

black mesa golf club new mexicoGreens

Remember the aforementioned boring golf courses? They’re also the ones with flat, round greens. You won’t find any of that at Black Mesa. All of the greens at Black Mesa are uniquely shaped and contoured. The fringes and hills around the greens also provide contours and shaping while still being one with the terrain.

Putting on the greens at Black Mesa is a blast. The many humps, bumps and bowls provide a creative putter and short game player with a ton of shot and line options. Some hole locations can be reached by going at several different angles with your putt or chip, and letting the lay of the green and gravity work the ball.

Though the greens at Black Mesa are large and have a myriad of breaks, they’re not unfair. A skilled player could place a shot to the correct section of the green and have a great shot at birdie.

Alien face?

I mentioned an alien face in my introduction. My pal Jay has said, and I’d have to agree, the 16th green is the “alien face” green. Looking at this green from a distance you can really see an alien face. Check the picture above, looking down from the top of the alien’s head. Perhaps this is some sort of alien version of Stonehenge looking up at the sky to signal the next coming of an alien ship to New Mexico?

I stood on the bridge of the alien face nose and dropped golf balls, rotating 3-4 feet. Just a 3-4 foot difference in where a ball started rolling, sent them rolling for dozens of feet in many different directions.

Playing the course

Unfortunately my game was in a bit of a shambles when I played Black Mesa. My normally deadly accurate driving suddenly turned into a deadly hook. Plus, I had a hard time concentrating on hitting decent golf shots because I was so busy admiring the course and the terrain. I shot 120 pictures on the first day alone, during my round!

I found myself in the badlands quite often, but surprisingly I found my ball every time. In fact, I played with the same ball the whole first 18. That would change on day two, when 30-40mph winds kicked up.

I had a blast playing the black tees on my first round and didn’t find the course to be over-the-top long at a little over 7300 yards. Keep in mind that Black Mesa is over 5000 feet above sea level and has dry air. The ball flies. 300 yard drives are not uncommon. I did have to hit a driver on the 238 yard par-3 8th hole though, as a strong wind was shooting right up the canyon.

I loved the amazing views from the elevated tees. Many tees were at the tops of badland hills or mesas and you could see for miles in every direction.

black mesa golf club 15th hole
Above: The beautiful 15th hole at Black Mesa

The contours of the fairways and greens presented me with a ton of opportunities for fun shots. If I got careless I’d pay the price by missing the green and having a tough bunker shot or up-and-down from a collection area.

The putting greens at Black Mesa are amazingly fun. With all the contours (like the alien face), a creative putter could have a great time playing breaks and utilizing the hills on and around the putting surface. On a couple of holes I actually putted my approach putt OFF the green, up a hill and back onto the green, leaving myself a tap-in 2nd putt!

In the putt above I putted off the green, up the hill and back down to a tap in!

I managed a 41/41 round of 82 on this par 72 layout for my tipped-out first round. Normally an 82 for me is pretty bad. But in this case, not knowing the course layout is a huge disadvantage and I was moderately happy. On many shots I had no idea where to go or even where the fairway was unless I drove past the badland hills blocking my view. The more course knowledge here the better.

On the 2nd day, the winds were furious and it was cold. I played the blue tees and was enjoying getting a completely different flavor and look than I’d gotten from the blacks the day before. The 30-40mph cold winds beat me down pretty bad though and I shot about a million. I eventually stopped keeping score and focused on enjoying the layout and the New Mexico surroundings.

I fully intend to make many trips back to Black Mesa to see what I can really shoot if I play my A-game.

Amenities

No snooty attitude. No gaudy, mammoth clubhouse. The clubhouse/proshop is comfortably functional, with nicely stocked Black Mesa apparel and equipment. Some of that apparel now has a new home in my closet. The cafe is a nice A-frame with a comfortable lounge upstairs. The cafe’s food selections are wonderful. I devoured several of them. Many of the items on the menu are good old Southwest family recipies.

black mesa golf club new mexicoblack mesa golf club new mexico
Above left – Black Mesa Pro Shop :: Above right – Black Mesa Cafe

The practice facilities at Black Mesa are superb. There’s a full driving range and practice green. Best of all, there’s a short game area with a green and those signature awesome Black Mesa style bunkers.

Staff

My pal and owner Eddie Peck is the coolest. I’ve had the pleasure of playing a bunch of golf with Eddie over the last year. Eddie is a great guy who loves golf and is living the dream (sometimes nightmare) of owning a golf course. He’s passionate about the game, it’s nuances and his golf course.

If simply practicing isn’t enough and you need a lesson or two, Black Mesa’s pro Tom Velarde will take care of you. I played some golf with Tom and he’s a heck of a cool cat. I asked Tom for some pointers but after looking at my “granny over-the-top epileptic seizure on crack reverse pivot” swing, he told me he was thinking of retiring…. Just kidding.

Pat Brockwell is Black Mesa’s superintendent. Pat has a very mellow, calm personality. Don’t let his calm demeanor fool you though. Pat is passionate about his work and about keeping Black Mesa in tip top condition. I befriended Pat quickly and we chatted about the course and golf course maintenance for an extended period of time. Our conversations went from Poanua to skiing. Pat is also a skilled skier and he and I will be hitting the slopes here in Salt Lake.

Black Mesa has more trophies and awards than the people who play there

Standing in the cafe, you can see dozens of awards and magazine articles hanging on the wall. Here are a few:

GOLF Magazine
Top 100 You Can Play at No. 47
Top 100 Best Bang For Your Buck at No. 25
Top Thrifty 50 at No. 11
2003 Top Ten You Can Play

Golfweek
2006 Top 100 Modern (post-1960) Courses at No. 62

Golf Digest
2003 Best New Affordable Public Course

T + L Golf
Four and a Half Stars (out of five)

Celebrated Living
Editor’s Pick: Top U.S. Golf Courses

Perhaps I need to come up with a Hooked On Golf Blog award system so I can get my pals at Black Mesa to put my award in their list… I’ll work on that.

Off the course

I’ve got plans of doing a few more articles on other things to do in the artsy Santa Fe area. I had the pleasure of staying at The Bishop’s Lodge and touring around downtown Santa Fe. I had some great meals at Santa Fe’s Tamasitos mexican restaurant and the Black Mesa Steak House located in the Santa Clara Pueblo’s Big Rock Casino. Stay tuned for more on these later.

black mesa golf clubBlack Mesa Photo Gallery

Check out the over 300 photos of Black Mesa located in the Hooked On Golf Blog Black Mesa Gallery.

Conclusion

Black Mesa is a “must play” course. It’s a wonderful golf experience all around. The course design, routing and scenery are stunning. The course is fair and fun to play, if you can keep from dropping your jaw on every shot due to the amazing design and landscape.

Black Mesa doesn’t kick your butt and send you home humiliated. It kicks your butt and sends you home with a smile on your face.


MORE POSTS








LATEST REVIEWS








Facebook

1,800+ FOLLOWERS


HOG Twitter

4,000+ FOLLOWERS


TK Twitter

4,950+ FOLLOWERS


Instagram

500+ FOLLOWERS


YouTube

5,500,000+ VIEWS