
Orlando Golf - Course, Resort and Package Information
One look at the scorecard for Walt Disney World Resort's Eagle Pines Golf Course at Bonnet Creek will send your heart skipping like a stone across water, as
water is just about everywhere.
The good news is that while it's present on 16 of Eagle Pines' 18 championship holes, its purpose is
more to enhance than to punish. Surprisingly, it is the flat, savanna-like fairways and the numerous, pampas-filled wastelands that actually steal the show.
Considered a low-profile course, Eagle Pines plays level with, or slightly below, its bordering terrain. As a result, drainage is toward the center, which then feeds
into the waste bunkers and eventually into the naturally, wooded wetlands. The fairways do have undulations - so do the greens - but as sister course to nearby
Osprey Ridge, it appears as a complete opposite.
According to Kevin Weickel, Disney's Head Professional and Tournament Director of the National Car Rental Classic, Pete Dye and fellow architect Tom Fazio were
given the choice in 1991 of which two parcels of land at Bonnet Creek they preferred to develop.
One featured high and dry, sandy ridges, while the other, Florida wetland and swamp. Dye deferred to Fazio who chose to "take the high road" that later
became Osprey Ridge.
"It was easier to mess with," Weickel says. "But it just turned out to be to their
fortes. Fazio is known more for those types of courses where Dye probably has a few more marshy, Florida wetland courses."
Dye, who is also known for his use of railroad ties around tee boxes and as borders along waterways, incorporated natural grasses and followed the contours
of the land at Eagle Pines. Thus, his work earned the course certification as an Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary by the Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary System in September 2000.
Your work at Eagle Pines however, is to use every part of your game. The opening hole, for instance, is a wide, 380-yard, par 4 that spreads beyond a
large waste bunker off the tee, then funnels directly into the forest. An accurate drive here will keep the water deep and left and the small pond to the right, out of play.
The water carry at the par 3 number 3 with its false back suggests a soft, flop shot if you missed the green, and the traps along the 470-yard, par 5 number 4,
surely require finesse.
At the number one handicapped, par 4 number 5, the challenge is its length at 463 yards, compounded by wind and a dogleg right along a forest wall that
comes into play. Make it around the bend, and you'll find a well-guarded green, front and left, by a small bunker and a body of water that eventually connects to the fairway of number 6.
Water again plays havoc at holes 7 through 11. But by the 190-yard, par 3 number 15, there's an added element - a wall that supports the elevated green from a small pond.
"The green is a slight optical illusion," says Weickel. "The wall is not straight
across as it may appear from the tee. A ball hit center right will usually fall short and hit the wall. But a ball of the same distance hit left will land on the green."
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