Saturday 16th October - Sunday 17th October
Play the Gold Country
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Two rounds of Golf with carts
Saddle Creek Sat 12 pm
Sequoia Woods Sun 9:00am
$10 per person towards prizes.
Muffin and juice delivered to your room on Sunday
morning
All applicable taxes and gratuities
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Open to members and guests
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Deposit required by August 31st. Go to the contact page and ask
to be put on the email list for further information.
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Sequoia
Woods, a private country club located in the Sierra foothills,
offers
you unparalleled quality, gracious service and a year-round 18-hole,
par 70 course which challenges players from scratch to the high handicapper.
The four-hour round still exists. At 4,000 feet there's no rush, no
hurry. You'll have blue jays, quail and squirrels as your playing
partners. A peaceful mountain getaway from the city's rush where you
capture all four seasons in one location. The golf course makes dramatic
use of the natural terrain with a meandering meadow, some graduated
slopes and scenic lakes. The first nine holes hug the open meadow
while the second nine, narrowed by the pines, offer accuracy at a
premium. The course was designed by the well-known golf course architect
Bob Baldock. |
Few courses can boast the attributes and amenities of Saddle
Creek Golf Club.
The creative course layout, designed by Morrish & Associates,
highlights the distant views of the surrounding mountains and has
been built to complement the natural contour of the land. This spectacular
championship course highlights generous fairway landings and more
than 100 white sand bunkers, bringing to mind the sweeping traditional
style of the Olympic Club in San Francisco.
The breathtaking views and truly challenging nature of this golf course
has led to Saddle Creek Golf Club becoming one of the top five public
access courses in Northern California, along with Spyglass, Poppy
Hills and Pasatiempo. Golf Digest called it one of the best semi-private
golf courses west of the Mississippi. And according to a noted golf
writer, “you won't find better greens this side of Augusta.” |
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