colo_may_june 06 - Desert Golf and Tennis
Transcription
colo_may_june 06 - Desert Golf and Tennis
contents OctOberNOvember2014 Departments CiCi Bellis Photo by Luigi Serra ON PAR COURSE DESIGN PUBLISHER’S NOTES.......................................................9 BROWN IS THE NEW GREEN Letting golf courses go more natural is finally being accepted in the face of drought ................24 ON COVER THE CLASSIC CLUB DIFFERENCE What makes this public golf facility such a standout? Pretty much everything! .........................12 PLAY WORTHY PUBLIC IN PALM DESERT & BEYOND Upscale reputation aside, the Coachella Valley has excellent public golf courses galore ................26 SPOT LIGHT GOLF INSTRUCTION CICI BELLIS: THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN TENNIS The rising star stepped onto the world stage at the 2014 U.S. Open .............................................16 INFLUENCE, IMPACT, IMPROVE: THE FIRST TEE One young golfer learns a variety of lessons.........32 ANCHORS ON THE FAIRWAY—FORE! Four local newsmen tee it up for charity and way too much fun ...................................................18 STIFFING YOUR PITCH SHOTS What’s new in pitch shots? Here’s what you need to know...........................................................34 COURSE DESIGN MAPS, DIRECTORIES AND PRIVATE CLUBS INSIDE GOLF-COURSE DESIGN Golf-course architect Clive Clark provides an insider’s look at designing a golf course ...........20 TENNIS CLUBS...........................................................56 GOLF CLUBS ............................................................64 Cover: Classic Club DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 5 contents OctOberNOvember2014 Lifestyle The fire pit at Arnold Palmer’s Resturant DESERT GOLF & TENNIS REALTY LUXURY AUTOS MEET THE NEW BMW I8 In a word, wow!...........................................................48 THE GOOD LIFE THE TINY HOUSE MOVEMENT Is this space-saving compact home right for you? It might be ....................................................38 DESERT GOLF & TENNIS LIFESTYLE FINE DINING DINING IN THE DESERT The Desert Golf & Tennis guide to eating out in the Coachella Valley..............................................42 STYLE REPORT ON COURSE YOU ARE WHAT YOU WEAR Pros fit the personal to personality—and you can, too ...............................................................52 FINE JEWELRY FINE JEWELRY AND TIMEPIECES: A MATTER OF TRUST Brands that inspire loyalty .........................................54 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 7 OctOberNOvember2014 Publisher’sNotes by timothy J. Pade • [email protected] When we decided to change our title last season from Desert Golf Magazine to Desert Golf & Tennis after 17 years as the leading regional golf publication in the nation, we hoped that the response would be positive. After just a few short months, that’s exactly what it has been. The emails and responses from our readers and support from our advertisers have been overwhelmingly positive. We thank everyone for the kind words and support, and we especially thank our advertisers who help us keep this publication going. We begin this new season featuring some of the best public golf courses in the country, which are right in our backyard. On the cover is one of them, the excellent Classic Club, former host course of the Bob Hope Classic, home of the Berger Foundation and one of the most philanthropic facilities in the country. The Berger Foundation donates the golf course to numerous charities throughout the year, raising tens of thousands of dollars for worthy programs. Read more about Classic Club starting on pg. 12. One of the huge contentions throughout the country is the concept of celebrity tournaments. Many of our desert events no longer include celebrities in the field. Imagine if Bob Hope had not been in the field of the PGA tournament that he made into a legendary event. Would it have possibly been the same? Over the last 50 years, celebrities have been invited to participate in tournaments to help bring attention to the events, draw patrons to the galleries and attract the legions of stargazers to attend and participate. No longer. Celebrities are not invited to play in the Humana Challenge, the Kraft Nabisco or many other tournaments. According to sources in the PGA Tour, “celebrities simply cost too much.” The accommodations they require, the swag, even the food they consume has gotten to be an expense the Tour no longer wants. “The spots in our field need to be paid for. In order to be successful in today’s economy, we can no longer simply give those spots away to anyone.” So the legendary entertainers and superstar athletes that once brought star quality to the desert fairways are gone. Will the crowds of fans who paid to be in the galleries to watch their favorite movie and rock stars play on some of the finest golf courses in the country be gone too? Hopefully this decision will not bring an end to Tour events in the desert. Founded by legendary entertainer Dinah Shore in 1972, The Kraft Nabisco Championship hosted some of the most famous names in entertainment and sports. It was marketing brilliance to have the world’s most famous faces in the field and Dinah Shore lent her name, likeness and relationships to propel this event into becoming the first major each season on the LPGA Tour. As of this issue, the LPGA still has not found a sponsor to replace Kraft Nabisco, and an event that glittered for more than 42 years is now in jeopardy of being lost entirely. In 2015, the LPGA and IMG, an entertainment and media agency, will carry the costs of the tournament. After that, who knows? Sad, really sad. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 9 OctoberNovember2014 18th Annual Editor/Publisher: TIMOTHY J. PADE Deputy Articles Editor: CHRISTINE LOOMIS Writers: AARON ATWOOD CLIVE CLARK DIANE MARLIN-DIRKX ALISON ELSNER JENELL FONTES CHRIS LEWIS CHRISTINE LOOMIS MATT MCKAY JANET NEWCOMB FRANÇOISE RHODES JUDD SPICER ROB STANGER Art Director: MICHAEL UNGER Photography: LUIGI SERRA DANE ANDREW MARC GLASSMAN BILLIE WEISS DICK DURRANCE II KEN E. MAY JOHN HENEBRY GREG FELSEN vol.Xviii, No.i Marketing/Promotion: TIMOTHY J. PADE P.O. Box 1158, Rancho Mirage, CA 92270 (760) 969-2392 • (800) 858-9677 [email protected] JOYCE HENRY Account Executive (760) 219-1606 DUKE GREGORY Account Executive 760-408-6402 [email protected] CORINNE GARGAN Account Executive 760-619-6323 [email protected] INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL EDITOR SUSANNE KEMPER P.O. Box 2537, CH1211 Geneva #2, Switzerland VICE PRESIDENT SALES & MARKETING, HAWAII DIVISION KATHRYN HELLER 469 Ena Road #3507, Honolulu, HI 96815 Marketing Pacific Northwest Region: MARY CONDY (541) 390-9504 Bend, OR 97702 [email protected] Desert Golf & Tennis is published under ISSN No. 1522-9777 five times a year by Pade Publishing L.L.C., P.O. Box 1158, Rancho Mirage, CA 92270. All contents of this magazine are copyrighted 2014 by Pade Publishing L.L.C., all rights reserved. Reproduction or use of the editorial or graphic content of this magazine, without permission, in any manner, is prohibited.© To subscribe: 1yr. at $24.75, 2 yrs at $49.50 and 3 yrs. at $74.25. Send check to: P.O. Box 1158, Rancho Mirage, CA 92270 TO SUBSCRIBE call: 760-969-2392 or visit dgnt.com Desert Golf & Tennis, LLC President, Timothy J. Pade In Memoriam, Executive Vice President, Ellen Meyer Secretary, Sherwood Steele Legal Counsel, Michael Henson AS S’N FA WR IT RS O E Desert Golf & Tennis is a division of Pade Publishing, L.L.C. C A O LF M E RI G National Photography Award 1st Place International Network of Golf Awards 2004, 2005 & 2008 10 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Follow us on facebook at: facebook.com/golfmagazines Search “Desert Golf” on facebook and become a fan for updates and golf promos Follow us on twitter at: twitter.com/desertgolfguy Welcome Ba ck To A New Sea son! Now Open By Christine Loomis Oncover C lassic Club is special among Coachella Valley golf clubs. From its golf course to its restaurant to its overall culture and ambience, Classic Club stands out. Even its history sets it apart. The course was designed by Arnold Palmer to serve as host site for the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic (later renamed the Humana Challenge). Classic Club was gifted by a charitable organization to the tournament, which became the only PGA Tour tournament to own its own facility. After 2008, the course moved off the Bob Hope rotation, but its design, reputation and management have kept it high on the must-play list for locals and visitors. “The Classic Club is special for several reasons,” says Greg Rubino, general manager, “but the most important aspect is that we hold the facility for charitable purposes, which allows us to help hundreds of charities a year raise money for their worthy causes.” The course is now a Certified Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary, increasing its appeal. Keith Einwag, director of agronomy (soil science) at Classic Club, says the certification process involves six steps/elements: environmental planning, wildlife and habitat management, chemical use reduction and safety, water conservation, water quality management, and local outreach and DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 13 Oncover education. Classic Club meets or exceeds all of the requirements, and it’s also a terrific golf course on which to play. “The course design is straightforward and fun to play at any level, from the beginner to the professional golfer,” Einwag says. “The best part of playing golf at Classic Club is that from your first step out of your car you never feel like you are in the desert. The course has water in play on 13 holes and the landscape includes olive and oak trees along with three different varieties of pines—you will not find any cactus or palm trees.” Although the wind has sometimes been pointed to as a problem for players, Rubino says much of that talk comes from rumor rather than fact. Yes, the wind does blow through the valley as it does through most valleys. However, Rubino notes, “If it were windy every day then we would not sell out every single day during the season.” And sell out is exactly what Classic Club does because it’s just that good. Making it even better is a customercentric focus that comes from Troon Golf, which manages the club, and from onsite managers who implement and instill a culture of good service. Ruan Krugel, director of food and beverage, says that he often hears about places focusing on customers but rarely sees it in practice. “At Classic Club, it is something we live by.” In spite of its name this is not a private facility, though first-time guests may well 14 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 think it is. Krugel points to Troon’s famous “member for a day” mentality, which reflects the organization’s core belief that customers at public golf courses should be viewed as members and treated the same way that members of private clubs are treated by their facilities. In other words, a day at Classic Club should equate to a private-club experience. Krugel says that as general manager, Rubino has added to that with his own mantra: “If it is good for our guest, good for business and in the best interest of our owners, no matter what it is, do it!” The result is a team of associates empowered to do whatever it takes to make guests happy. “We often joke that we will do anything as long as it is not illegal,” Krugel says. “We will create special items, special menus or host events anywhere that is feasible to make our clients and guests happy. Overarching all of this, and furthering our level of buy-in, our ownership has created an atmosphere in which we offer only the best items and highest-quality ingredients at a cost that is always below that of the market. That sets us apart from any other establishment. There are many fine Oncover restaurants that can say that they also offer the best ingredients, but they could not do so at our value. “I can think of many examples to illustrate this, but by far the greatest would be our wine program. We offer world-class wines, often at pricing lower than would be available to consumers purchasing the wines directly from the winery. For example, we sell Caymus Special Selection for $125 a bottle. The winery sells it for $130.” In addition to its phenomenal wine program, Bellatrix, Classic Club’s stellar restaurant, has a chef and menu that have set a high standard—not just among public-golf-course facilities but among any of the Coachella Valley’s fine-dining restaurants. Chef Gerard Brunett has created a menu that changes seasonally and focuses on locally grown produce and high-quality meats. “Our fish is delivered daily and sourced from both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans,” Brunett says. “We serve a variety of continental cuisine with Mediterranean and Asian influences. Examples include our Korean short ribs with hoi sin coleslaw and chicken cavatappi with mushrooms, sun-dried tomatoes and asparagus.” Chef Brunett likes to combine unlikely flavor combinations in order to produce uniquely flavored dishes, and the menu showcases that. “Roasted butternut squash, sage and goat-cheese flatbread, and our White Marble Farms pork loin with raspberry jam and wilted arugula are a couple of examples,” he says. Every dish served at Bellatrix is created with flavor combinations, freshness, texture and simple but elegant presentations in mind. Of course, the chef has his favorites and that may help first-timers decide what to order. “The Moroccan spiced grouper is one of my favorites,” he says. “It blends unique spices that have a touch of heat and are complemented by the sweetness of a roasted yellow-pepper coulis along with a crisp potato cake that adds a nice crunchy texture to the dish.” The food and wine are just one part of Classic Club’s overall excellence. “We are fortunate enough to have a business model that allows us to cultivate a following and loyal supporters versus attempting to make as much money in the shortest amount of time and off the fewest number of visitors,” Krugel says. “While this might seem like a foreign concept in this day and age, in the long term I believe this will pay off and set us even more firmly apart.” _________________________________________ Christine Loomis is a staff writer and editor with Desert Golf & Tennis DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 15 By Chris Lewis • Photos by Luigi Serra spotlight F or years, Catherine “CiCi” Bellis had dreamed of this moment. Whether she was watching Maria Sharapova for the first time on television or committing herself to tennis rather than soccer, she often envisioned herself playing in the U.S. Open Tennis Championships. As she entered Arthur Ashe Stadium in Queens, New York, this year and walked towards Court No. 6, her dreams were about to come true. Years of hard work, along with the support of her loving parents, had prepared the Atherton, California, native for the challenge that awaited her: a first-round match against world No. 13 Dominika Cibulkova, who had finished runner-up at this year’s Australian Open. Bellis, just 15 years old, ranked 1,208 in the world. How could she possibly defeat the 25-year-old veteran? To those who had not observed Bellis’s play in recent months, the odds did not appear to stack in her favor. However, for the most avid of tennis fans, she seemingly had the talent to compete. After all, on August 9 she defeated Tornado Alicia Black 6-3, 6-1 to become the youngest winner of the USTA Girls 18s’ National Championship since 1991. With the win, she not only rose to No. 2 in the International Tennis Federation (ITF) junior rankings, but also earned a wild card to the U.S. Open. Because of this victory, the prodigy, a winner of four ITF junior singles titles this summer alone, had an opportunity to display her skills to a national audience that, for the most part, had never even heard of her. She took full advantage of her opportunity. Bellis began her first set as if she were truly on a mission, winning 6-1. After her momentum stalled during the second set, which she lost 4-6, she recovered, demonstrating the tenacity that helped her acquire a 34-4 record in international junior competition this summer. She won the third set 6-4 to complete what was arguably the greatest upset of this year’s U.S. Open. “Anybody can beat anybody on any given day,” she said shortly after her historic win. “Ranking has no bearing on the match. Whoever comes out and plays better that day is going to win.” Still, no one could deny the significance of the performance, not even Bellis herself. Prior to her win, a 15-year-old female had not captured a U.S. Open match since 1996, when Russia’s Anna Kournikova shocked the world. Moreover, no American girl that age or younger had won a U.S. Open match in 28 years. Suddenly, Bellis was one of the main topics of the championship and a fan favorite, drawing nearly 38,000 spectators for her secondround match against world No. 48 Zarina Diyas. Held on Court No. 17,the match did not begin as Bellis had intended, resulting in a 6-3 loss in the first set. But once again she rallied to overcome the odds, winning the second set 6-0, as well as the first game of the third set. Unfortunately for Bellis and her newfound fan base, her winning streak did not continue; she ultimately lost the third set 6-2. Despite the disappointment, she chose to evaluate only the positives of her performances. “What surprised me is that I could really play with these pros,” she stated after the defeat. “I think if I had played a little better, it would have been a different result. This [championship] game me a lot more confidence.” As Bellis prepares for the future, she is determined to work even harder to achieve her goals and return to the national spotlight, which she clearly relished. “I love it when people watch me. It gives me more energy and makes me play better,” she says. She remains grounded and resolved in spite of the losses, and there’s no doubt that she fully comprehends the potential she has to become a successful tennis professional. “I’m definitely going to [retain my] amateur [status] right now to keep my options open for college. But I’d love to be a pro one day,” she says. “People have been saying I’m going to be the future of American tennis—that’s what I’ve wanted since I was a little kid. It makes me want to work really hard and try to become that.” ________________________________________________ Chris Lewis is a contributing writer to Desert Golf & Tennis DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 17 By Françoise Rhodes Patrick Evans, John White, Gino Lamont, Kris Long T he Anchor Challenge has created quite a buzz, including major trash talking, bragging rights and unusual camaraderie between four television newsmen with four completely different golf games. The Challenge was designed to encourage locals to attend the Humana Challenge and root for one of the three anchors participating in the tournament: Gino LaMont, Kris Long and John White. The goal for the anchors is to win the amateur tournament or, at least, to have the lowest team score of the three. Bragging rights are on the line, but more important, Humana donates $10,000 to the winning reporter’s charity of choice. To date, LaMont has won twice and Long and White once each. The Humana Challenge is just one of many charity tournaments this golfing group supports. Ask and they will be there, bringing with them crowd-pleasing wit and a keen awareness that they are participating to help those in need. Rounding out the celebrity-circuit foursome is Patrick Evans. In all fairness, Evans (admittedly) is the most golf-challenged of the group and he doesn’t participate in the Humana, yet he never misses the opportunity to play with others in the Frank Sinatra Celebrity Tournament, the Patrick Warburton event and a plethora of other charity golf tournaments that happen annually in the Coachella Valley. Having played together in and out of tournaments for about 12 years, a solid and often hilarious friendship has formed. As many laughs as this group has, however, there is also serious competition going on. Desert Golf & Tennis asked the newsmen/philanthropists about themselves, each other and their golf, and a few things were immediately clear. First, they all respect each other professionally. 18 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 They also don’t play golf together as much as they would like. And when asked about Evans’ game, they were bemused and uncertain how best to describe it. PATRICK EVANS Position: chief meteorologist at CBS 2 Family: Ryan, Guinness, Sophie (his three dogs) Golf stats: Playing since college, 19 handicap Most exciting golf experience: “I got married to my ex-wife on the golf course. It was the Indian Canyons South course and I still love it.” Most embarrassing golf experience: “I got married on the golf course.” Dream course yet to play: Pebble Beach Best round: 82 at the Ojai Valley Inn & Spa golf course, Ojai, California. About his own game: “On the very best of days it’s mediocre. Kenny Venturi once told me, ‘Patrick, you’re standing too close to the ball after you hit it!’” LaMont’s game: “Strikes the ball very well, has really improved his game. The story goes he brought his swing coach with him to the Humana; we still joke about that.” Long’s game: “We all wish that we could have Kris’s game. His approach shots and short game are phenomenal.” White’s game: “John has improved dramatically; his biggest problem is consistency, avoiding the blow up hole. But he hits it really far.” Ultimate foursome: Ken Venturi, Frank Sinatra, Arnold Palmer spotlight JOHN WHITE Position: Evening anchor-reporter at KESQ 3 Family: Wife Jacqueline Cynthia, daughter Golf stats: Playing since high school, 12 handicap Most exciting golf experience: “Playing all four days in the former Bob Hope Chrysler Classic. I birded 18 on the Palmer Private for a net eagle.We tied with Gino’s team for the win.” Most embarrassing golf experience: “I was playing with Alice Cooper and hit a line drive out of the bunker, through the middle of green and almost took Alice’s head off.” Dream course yet to play: Pebble Beach Best round: 81 at Indian Wells Country Club, Cove Course, black tees, Indian Wells, California. Description of his own game: “A thrill a minute, you never know what’s going to happen. LaMont’s game: “All or nothing.” Long’s game: “Steady as she goes, just like you would expect from the more mature player. He’s very good around the greens with his chipping and putting.” White’s game: “About the same erratic game as mine.” Best round: 69 at Landmark Golf Course, back tees, Hemet, California. Evans’ game: “Patrick doesn’t play golf. I don’t know what he is doing out there, but at no level is that golf.” Description of his own game: “Too short. I’m the only lefty in the group. I don’t want to brag but none of these guys has ever beaten me yet!” Ultimate foursome: Presidents Eisenhower, Reagan, Clinton and H.W. Bush. KRIS LONG Position: Evening anchor-reporter at CBS 2 Family: Wife Sally, daughter Hillary Golf stats: Playing over 40 years, handicap 6.3 Most exciting golf experience: “Are we talking late at night on the golf course? Getting to play with PGA Tour pros is as good as it gets.” Most embarrassing golf experience: “When I was 26 or 27, I was in a bunker and hit a terrible shot. I lost my temper and hurled my sand wedge, which went like a rotor on a helicopter out of the bunker. One of my buddies was there and luckily, he jumped right over it—it could have decapitated the guy.” Dream course yet to play: Augusta National LaMont’s game: “Has tremendous potential if he did not become a father almost at the same time he became an octogenarian. Longest in the group when he hits it well, however he’s a little directionally challenged.” White’s game: “Very roller coaster. He can go a few months where he improves and then he seems to fall back into his old habits. We never let John score because he has to write down so much stuff, I swear he even writes down the wind condition.” Evans’ game: “It always starts with a Bloody Mary. The beauty of Patrick’s game is he knows his limitations and it doesn’t keep him from firing off joke after joke and pun after pun. He has a great time despite his game.” Ultimate foursome: My dad Howard, father-in-law Omar, Arnold Palmer _______________________________ Francoise Rhodes is astaff writer with Desert Golf & Tennis Evans’ game: “He has the biggest swing that you can still take inside a phone booth.” Ultimate foursome: Arnold Palmer, John Daly, Payne Stewart GINO LAMONT Position:evening anchor-reporter at KMIR 6 Family: Wife Sandra, daughter Parker, son Hudson Golf stats: Playing since 1997, handicap 18 vMost exciting golf experience: “It was the first Anchor Challenge and the pro I was playing with went out birdie, birdie, eagle on 18, which shot me from last place to first.” Most embarrassing golf experience: “I was teeing off at the old Lexus tournament, playing with Matt Lauer, a scratch golfer. I sent the ball 100 feet straight up and about 40 yards out.” Dream course yet to play: Pebble Beach Best round: 82 at Big Horn Golf Club, the Mountains Course, Palm Desert, California. About his own game: “Erratic.” Long’s game: “Steady, great lefty swing, hits down the middle.” DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 19 The Hideaway Golf Club courseDesign By Clive Clark The process of designing and building a golf course in the desert is very different than the process elsewhere in the United States. First, you would think it is less expensive because we have free-draining sand. Mmmm, well, not exactly. It is actually more expensive. Why? Because we have to create or bring in pretty much everything. Many desert courses start on a site that is pan flat—ideal for growing potatoes but less so for creating an interesting golf course. Invariably, real estate is involved, which adds another dynamic with regard to the design. The golf course has to be designed so that the homes capitalize on the views and integrate into the ambience and scenery of the course. The key to success is designing a balanced golf course that has interest, personality and playability. It’s therefore important that the course architect work closely from the start with the planning consultant. On flat sites, the golf course is typically dropped and the home lots are raised so houses can be positioned to take advantage of the golf-course views. With all these projects, no dirt is imported nor does it leave the site; the grading is calculated to balance perfectly. The designer generally starts with a flat site with no meaningful vegetation. Given the above comments, the trick is to create interest and holes with individuality through careful earth movement and grading. At the same time, the designer must develop features that add cosmetics and personality but that stay within the bounds such that the course has playability. Features are created in many different forms and guises. For instance, wild and colorful flowers can be a real eye pleaser. But beware the architect who goes overboard as maintenance of this particular feature can be expensive. Wildflowers need irrigation DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 21 courseDesign assessing the break of their putt on this large 9,000-square-foot green are ever aware that Highway 111, the main thoroughfare through the Coachella Valley, is actually within about 50 yards of where they are putting. Judicious mounding also plays a large part in deadening the sound of the I-10 Freeway at the southern end of Eagle Falls Golf Club at Fantasy Springs Casino. In addition to mounding, shrubs and trees play an important part in increasing the vertical dynamic of what might otherwise be a f lat and uninteresting desert layout. The private course I designed at The Hideaway Golf Club in La Quinta is a perfect example of this. Several thousand colorful shrubs help to artistically break up the wildf lower landscape, and the addition of stone pine and the appropriate use of palm trees around the water features (which exist on 15 of the holes) help to create a great variety of both texture and color. The Celebrity Course at Indian Wells Resort and are prone to replacement. Moreover, a small army of greenskeepers is required to do the weeding. In my desert designs, such as those at The Hideaway in La Quinta, The Celebrity Course at Indian Wells Resort and Eagle Falls at Fantasy Springs Casino in Indio, I like to use bunkers for multiple reasons including to determine strategic play and provide options. But I also use them to form part of the cosmetics and to create useful turning points for the dog-leg holes. I prefer to have fairway bunkers that are shallower so players can be aggressive. If a player hits a good shot from the sand, he can cover a fair amount of distance. On many occasions, these fairway bunkers will allow the spirited golfer to escape with a shot of 130 to 200 yards. I tend to make greenside bunkers a little deeper as they add drama. In fairness, the golfer will be using a wedge of 54 to 60 degree. In fact, Phil Mickelson invariably uses a 64-degree wedge, which I’m sure the late golf writer Herbert Warren Wind would have declared more suitable for an early-morning shave. Other favorite features of a desert golf course are streams, babbling brooks, splitlevel lakes and waterfalls. These can add greatly to the ambience if well constructed and they give golfers the feeling of being out in nature. Hearing the water is beneficial, too. The sound of running water is appealing. But creating running water also provides an ideal opportunity for the 22 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 The Hideaway Golf Club designer to work with mounding, which can be important in two ways if a green lies near a main road. First, a series of waterfalls can screen the road and traffic visually. Second, waterfalls can help deaden the sound of somebody blasting his new Corvette at full ‘tonk.’ This type of feature appears on the par5 14th hole on The Celebrity Course at Indian Wells Resort. Very few golfers For all of these reasons, it’s easy to understand why constructing a golf course on an empty flat desert site can be far more expensive than creating one in the lavish landscapes of the Eastern Seaboard. _______________________________ Clive Clark is a sought-after golf course architect, former Ryder Cup player and a staff writer with Desert Golf & Tennis By Matt McKay A ll right, so the Southwestern United States is embroiled in an historic drought. But you like your golf played on grass. What’s an industry to do? Quite a bit, actually. In fact, the golf industry’s efforts to conserve water, develop strains of turf grass that require less irrigation, allow more natural areas to come into play, and outright eliminate of yards and yards of turf have been ongoing for several years, even decades on the USGA level. All those techniques, and all those good practices, have served the industry well during these days of difficulty. And, as it turns out, there’s even something the rank-and-file golfer can do to help. Some areas have been less affected by the drought than others. For example, the Coachella Valley of Southern California benefits from one of North America’s largest aquifers directly underneath a barren desert. There is obvious concern about its long-term depletion, and the state of California has moved recently to regulate underground aquifers for the first time. But the Coachella Valley is not suffering in the same way as areas that rely on snowmelt, the Colorado River or past rainfall patterns for their water. “How you’ve been affected depends on where you live,” says Craig Kessler, director of Governmental Affairs for the Southern California courseDesign Golf Association. “Ironically, the Coachella Valley is probably in best shape, despite the fact that it’s in a desert. Those that depend on rain, the Colorado River, snow pack, etcetera, have been affected in an inverse proportion. For example, if you live in Santa Cruz, which normally gets 30 inches of rain a year, and then you get in drought conditions, it’s a completely different situation than when it doesn’t rain than in the Coachella Valley, which only gets about 1.5 inches of rain a year anyway.” Fortunately, golf’s reaction has been in place for some time. For starters, golf courses have two major expenses: labor and water. So the incentive to minimize water use has always been there. However, now that a drought is actually in effect, the water conservation techniques are coming in handy. Pat Gross, Southwest regional director of the USGA’s Greens Section, says the USGA was ahead of the curve when it came to the game’s relationship with water. “The USGA has been active in this issue for more than 40 years, even back to the 1920s,” Gross says. “It’s been using updated methods of watering and determining ways to minimize pesticides for years. And it’s also been developing turf that’s more drought- and pestresistant. So this is nothing new to the USGA. We’ve even developed a USGA water-resources website, trying to educate all of our audience, from golfers to GMs, to gain a better understanding how water use affects their game and their course.” As golf courses confront what could be a dry future for some time, two conservation techniques have become more fashionable of late— and they work somewhat hand-in-hand. Kessler and Gross both credit the USGA’s golf-course set-up for the 2014 U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort’s No. 2 Course for bringing back the “natural” areas adjacent to fairways, and in general letting the course turn brown and crispy on the edges. The set-up required much less water than the previous resort set-up, and also played much firmer and faster. This type of setup could help free golf-course superintendents from high member expectations. Whereas the notion of a beautiful golf course is often one of wall-to-wall lush green grass, with emerald teeing grounds and pool-table top greens, it takes a lot of water, not to mention chemical and pesticide applications, to achieve such a look. The USGA’s apparent message from the 2014 U.S. Opens was: Brown (and natural) is beautiful. “The U.S. Open set-up was marvelous for superintendents because it gave them support and political cover, and let them know that it’s all right to use less water,” says Gross. “Superintendents have long known they can use less water, but they know they’re not going to get fired because their golf course is too green. We’ve seen so many positive examples of what can be done [with less water], superintendents now have the permission to execute these ideas. They’ve always known what to do, they just haven’t had permission.” The second technique gaining favor is turf reduction, or turf buyback programs. Kessler says the only really reliable way for a course to reduce its long-term water footprint is to reduce the amount of irrigated acreage. He said the Coachella Valley was the last bastion of unrestricted turf. In 2007,regulations were put into effect to limit new golf courses to no more than 72 acres of irrigated turf. Kessler notes that the Coachella Valley Water District has commenced with a commercial turf buyback program using a rate structure designed to provide the kind of subsidies major metro water districts can provide, and such subsidies are inspiring massive turf reductions in homes and commercial businesses in the Southwest. Both men also agreed the rank-and-file player/member can also have an impact by adapting to the new reality. Just as many individuals and businesses in the region are voluntarily reducing their water consumption and, in some cases, engaging in their own turf-reduction programs, golfers must be prepared to roll with the changes and accept the firmer, faster, browner, more-natural conditions. Kessler suggests golfers can make it clear to their facilities that they don’t expect golf in the arid southwest, particularly in the summer and fall, to look like Augusta National in the spring. They can acknowledge that even if superintendents don’t overseed roughs in the winter to create a more aesthetically beautiful look, the playing surface will still be perfectly good. And they can realize that the recent U.S. Opens and the upcoming U.S. Open at Chambers Bay in Washington, are intentionally presenting a more rugged, firm and fast look and play, which is actually the way the game is played throughout much of the world. The natural presentation is part of the game’s charm. “We got into a syndrome where the golf experience became lush carpets, and lots of waterfalls and ornamental golf features that became expectations that didn’t exist 40 to 50 years ago,” Kessler says. “And I think, if you’re an average golfer, moving away from that ethic and recognizing that the new ethic is consistent with the survivability of the industry, that would be the greatest help. It would remove the pressure from superintendents, golf-course managers and even homeowner associations connected with golf courses from always doing everything maximally green, lush and landscaped.” _________________________________________________ Matt McKay is a contributing writer to Desert Golf & Tennis DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 25 By Judd Spicer Desert Willow Golf Resort PlayWorthy Classic Club T he Coachella Valley isn’t just the place where the stars shine amid the sands. Though the desert is home to several of SoCal's most celebrated private clubs and courses, the region has no lack of options for choice and diverse public play. For residents enjoying the discounts of their favorite neighborhood track, locals seeking seasonal membership opportunities and valley visitors just looking to dust off their clubs, the area presents a bounty of tee sheets available to all. And to make it easy, this issue of Desert Golf & Tennis presents a comprehensive list of Coachella Valley public courses and resorts, listed in alphabetical order, in one handy place. Read on! Classic Club (18 holes, Palm Desert) Played across the sprawling grandeur of Certified Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary grounds, the Arnold Palmer championship design served as three-year host to the former Bob Hope Classic (2006-2008) and lives on as one of the valley's most demanding and impressive pieces of golf property. While water is abundant and distance is formidable (tipping out at 7,300 yards), the beauty of the grounds and adjoining clubhouse space keeps the track an instant classic. Desert Willow Golf Resort (36 holes, Palm Desert) Deservedly counted among the most lauded dual-course facilities in all of Southern California, Desert Willow, with its two magnificently carved courses and excellent clubhouse, is a must-visit for locals and visitors alike. Lower handicappers will revel in the challenge of forced carry (with ample visual stimuli) from the box, meaty bunkering and testy greens on the Firecliff Course, while all players will enjoy the more benign design of the Mountain View layout. Newsworthy: In late spring, it was announced that original co-designer, Dr. Michael Hurdzan, will soon return to the resort to oversee a reduction in maintained turf and non-native plants, bunker renovation and tee leveling at the Firecliff. Construction will be phased out across a three- to five-year period. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 27 PlayWorthy Eagle Falls Eagle Falls (18 holes, Indio) The valley's lone course located directly adjacent to a casino resort property, Clive Clark's Eagle Falls layout soars as a manicured test of links-style play. Gettable in distance, the course keeps players honest with massive green structures and some testy O.B. that's not a good bet to escape without a lamented drop. Indian Wells Golf Resort (36 holes, Indian Wells) Host to The Golf Channel's “Big Break Indian Wells” in 2011 and home to a pair of exceptional courses, Indian Wells Golf Resort recently made updates to the patio, pavilion and dining space of Vue Grille & Bar, which further enhances the allure of one of the desert's most popular spots. Mid-to-high handicappers will enjoy the colorful flora and eye-catching water features across the Clive Clark-designed Celebrity Course, while single-digit players will find challenge in the deep bunkering and 7,400 yards of length on John Fought's Players Course. 28 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Indian Wells Golf Resort PlayWorthy PGA West, TPC Stadium Course La Quinta Resort & Club and PGA West (5 courses, La Quinta) The five public plays under the umbrella ownership of “The Western Home of Golf in America” provide a potpourri of beauty and brawn. At PGA West: Both the Nicklaus Tournament Course and the Pete Dyedesigned TPC Stadium Course count among the region's most demanding plays. Each track asks for finite ball control and will prove astute tests of a player’s ability to maintain focus. For a mellower round, the Greg Norman Course matches minimal turf (and minimal housing) with the characteristic of decomposed granite routing. At La Quinta: The Dye-designed Dunes and Mountain courses present two distinct yet complementary layouts. At the Mountain Course, the back nine winds up through the Santa Rosa Mountains, castings a special spell of solitude and views. The rolling fairways of the Dunes Course evoke Scottish links. JW Marriott Desert Springs JW Marriott Desert Springs (36 holes, Palm Desert) Absorb a thorough and formidable water world drawn by the prolific King of Waterscapes, the late Ted Robinson. Both the Palm and Valley courses prove equally fun and engaging examples of resort-style play, with a host of holes that will prompt players to ponder strategy post-round at the ever-popular resort. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 29 PlayWorthy Marriott’s Shadow Ridge Marriott’s Shadow Ridge (18 holes, Palm Desert) The debut American design from six-time Major winner Nick Faldo combines a wealth of space from the box with an ongoing array of studied approaches to sizeable putting surfaces. Before 30 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 heading out to play these grounds that received a bunker renovation over the summer, make use of one of the valley's most unique practices facilities pre-round and ensure some time at the short-game range. PlayWorthy MORE COACHELLA VALLEY PUBLIC COURSE (Listed in alphabetical order) Cathedral Canyon Golf Club (18 holes, Cathedral City) Cimarron Golf Resort (18-hole championship, 18-hole executive, Palm Springs) Date Palm C.C. (18-hole executive, Cathedral City) Desert Dunes Golf Club (18 holes, Desert Hot Springs) Desert Falls C.C. (18 holes, Palm Desert) Desert Princess C.C. (Three nines, Cathedral City) Escena Golf Club (18 holes, Palm Springs) Heritage Palms Golf Club (18 holes, Indio) Omni Rancho Las Palmas Indio Municipal (Night-lit 18-hole par 3, Indio) Indian Palms C.C. & Resort (Three nines, Indio) Indian Springs Golf Club (18 holes, Indio) Mesquite Golf & C.C. (18 holes, Palm Springs) Mission Lakes C.C. (18 holes, Desert Hot Springs) Mountain Vista Sun City (36 holes, Palm Desert) Palm Desert C.C. (18 holes, Palm Desert) Palm Royale C.C. (18-hole par 3, La Quinta) Shadow Hills Golf Club (18-hole championship, 18-hole par 3, Indio) Shadow Mountain Golf Club (18 holes, Palm Desert) Suncrest C.C. (Nine holes, Palm Desert) SilverRock Resort Omni Rancho Las Palmas (Three Nines, Rancho Mirage) Ted Robinson's trio of nines offer a selection of play for all levels and ages. The opening three holes on the West Course will prove as tough a stretch as any in the region, while the resort grounds offer a seductively pleasant backdrop. SilverRock Resort (18 holes, La Quinta) Among the state's longest tracks at 7,600 yards from the tips, the breadth of this layout is nicely complemented by the artistry across the Arnold Palmer championship design. Long-ballers will delight in turn-and-burn opportunities, while players across all skill levels will need to study the shorter par 4s from the box and guarded approaches throughout. A one-time stop for the former Hope rotation (from 2008-11), SilverRock offers the dramatic Santa Rosas and sublime desert-scape among its attributes. _______________________________ Judd Spicer is a contributing writer to Desert Golf & Tennis Tahquitz Creek Golf Resort (36 holes, Palm Springs) The Golf Club at La Quinta (18 holes, La Quinta) The Golf Club at Terra Lago (36 holes, Indio) Tommy Jacobs' Bel Air Greens (Nine-hole executive, Palm Springs) Westin Mission Hills Golf Resort & Spa (36 holes, Rancho Mirage) Woodhaven C.C. (18 holes, Palm Desert) DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 31 By Jourdan Flynn Jourdan Flynn is a first-year student at The First Tee in Palm Desert, California. This is her report on how The First Tee has made a difference to her and to others Improve, develop or increase mental capacity by education or experience. The First Tee is definitely the epitome of improvement. The First Tee is a worldwide chain of golf schools where children young and old are taught the fundamentals of golf while also having fun and learning valuable lessons that can be applied to even the smallest things in everyday life. These programs are located at schools all around the United States, including in Palm Desert, California. They involve more than nine million participants and 17,000 volunteers located in 50 states and four international locations. The First Tee is sponsored by many popular golf organizations including the PGA, LPGA, The Masters Tour, PGA Tour and the USGA. These organizations sponsor The First Tee because they understand the mission and the importance of what this program teaches. President George W. Bush is a strong supporter of The First Tee and the honorary chairman. There are also many other individuals and companies locally and nationally that show support by donating clubs, equipment and funds so that the First Tee can provide more children with a chance to play golf. But it’s not just about golf. In addition to golf skills, First Tee staff focus on three core values: integrity, respect and honesty. There is also a code of conduct. Students must respect themselves, respect others and respect their surroundings. Golfinstruction How do these things go together with golf? One example is the value of honesty. What I learned is that you only cheat yourself by not being honest with your scores and with things in everyday life. The way golf works at the First Tee is usually based on age. There are five levels. Each level emphasizes one core value and how to apply it to your golf and your life. Instructors make the learning fun by teaching golf through a drill or activity and then recapping all instruction at the end of class to really make a mark on the kids. To move from one level to the next, students take a test. The test consists of how you use the core values, how you applied it in every aspect and your knowledge of golf and life skills. Students work hard to understand the theme of each level before moving to the next. Not everyone may feel the same, but my experience with The First Tee has been completely and utterly wonderful. The staff really makes everyone feel welcome and treats students as if they’ve known them for a long time. Most of the instructors give their time as volunteers. The coaches and volunteers are all so extremely friendly and kind and are great with students of all ages. They provide tips that will carry us through our lives and impart values we will use on and off the golf course. My favorite times are Thursdays when we’d go to a local golf facility to learn about the operations and the game while we played. I found that there is so much to learn—not only about golf, but also about myself. The First Tee is a very small, safe environment for such a big program. At the Palm Desert facility, the nine-hole executive golf course is a great place to play a quick game with friends or other students. First Tee makes the course available to everyone and provides students a chance to consider a career in golf. The larger goals of the program are to give everyone a chance to make a difference to themselves and others because the values taught also impact our families and our communities. Using golf as the tool, The First Tee has helped thousands of young people grow and learn and make a positive difference. To learn more about this organization, go to thefirsttee.org _______________________________ Jourdan Flynn’s First Tee lessons have created a desire to learn more about the game of golf and lifelong instruction about real core values. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 33 This issue's golf instruction comes from the 18th fairway at Desert Willow's Firecliff Golf Course. The 18th is a fantastic golf hole in the Coachella Valley and requires you to hit an excellent pitch shot to this green that is guarded by water and sand traps. 34 Alignment Takeaway I like the feeling of opening up my hips and chest to the target line so I am slightly facing the target in the distance. This alignment is very similar to a greenside bunker shot but not as extreme. I will also open the clubface slightly to counter balance my slightly open body alignment. If my open is aligned at, lets say 10 degrees left, than I will want the clubface to be angled slightly open at 10 degrees. The red line represents the "target line" that extends from the flagstick back through the golf ball, while the yellow line represents my body alignment. The key to every good swing happens in that first initial move in the swing, which is called "the takeaway." I really try to feel the body doing the majority of the wok in the golf swing, especially in the takeaway. Get the swing started correctly! I try to feel my body rotation move my hands/setup position into the backswing. Since I had a slightly open stance in my setup, my takeaway is going to move the golf club back along my toe line, which will create a little out-in swing path. A good check point for me is when the shaft is level to the ground; it should be directly on top of my toe line with my chest facing my hands. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Golfinstruction Setting the Club Round Off Your Finish Once I have made a good takeaway through my body rotation, moving the golf club directly back on top of the toe line, I need to set the golf club so the shaft is angled directly to the golf ball. This is a very important part of the golf swing. If I don't set the club correctly, it will make a negative impact on the impact of the golf ball. Notice in the photo how I keep my left arm low so it remains lower than level to the ground, requiring the cocking of the wrist to set the club. One major swing flaw I often see in golfers is the lifting of the left arm at this point, which in turn doesn't allow for the cocking of the wrist. Anytime the arms lift in the backswing, the shaft will get steep and create too steep of an angle of attack into the golf ball. The key to executing great pitch shots is to round off your finish. The majority of miss-hit wedge shots are due to golfers hanging back on their right side through impact. To execute a crisp wedge shot, I start by getting my weight posted into my left side in the forward swing. You can see in the photo how I have the majority of my weight "posting up" on top of my left foot. With the left leg serving as a "post," I try to rotate deep into my left side so my hands and golf club move through the ball on a shallow arc, therefore making it easier to control my divot depth by maintaining the angles in my hands. This is a new term in golf instruction called "holding off the shot," or in other words, not releasing the hands through impact. This is a technique that is commonly used in chipping or in sand shots; however, with greater body rotation it is now applicable to wedges from the fairway as well. I hope you enjoy practicing hitting better wedge shots from the fairway. _________________________________________________________ Rob Stanger, Director of Golf Instruction at Alpine Country Club, coaches on the PGA and the LPGA Tours. He offers subscribers a 25-percent discount on golf lessons. Contact him at [email protected] or visit his website at robstangergolf.com DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 35 realty desertgolfandtennisrealty.com The latest in real estate development across California, Arizona and Nevada By Jenell Fontes theGoodlife A re the days of ”McMansions” and the prestige of owning the biggest house on the block gone? What about overextended family finances and conspicuous consumption? Are they, too, becoming a thing of the past? Enter the Tiny House movement. Getting international attention on CNN, Guardian, Huffington Post, NBC, Oprah and PBS, the Tiny House movement may be more than just a brief trend What is a Tiny House? Ranging in size from an efficient 160 square feet to a spacious 500 square feet, Tiny Houses are something of a social movement, one where people are downsizing the space that they live in. The goal of living in one, advocates say, is a simpler life, being out of debt, living within your means and enjoying your job. People are joining this movement for many reasons. For some it is a reality of the recent housing recession. For others it’s about financial or even environmental concerns. But for many, it’s a means to finding more time and freedom in life. Whatever the reasons, it is a growing movement. Most Americans with an average home of 2,600 square feet have to dedicate one third to one half of their income just to keep a roof over their heads. This translates to 15 years of working over a lifetime just to pay for it. Because of that, 76% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck. Is there an alternative? One solution might be to live smaller. While Tiny Houses may not be for everyone, there are lessons to be learned and applied to escape the cycle of debt that so many Americans are trapped in. Who are the Tiny Homers? Only 29.9% of traditional homeowners in the United States own their homes compared to 68% of Tiny House owners who own their home outright! Two out of five Tiny House owners are 50 and older, spend more time with their families, take more vacations and are more educated than the average American homebuyer. Tiny House owners have chosen to live a life that does not include being a slave to house maintenance or a house payment. Could a Tiny Home work for you? Tiny Houses are created with environmental care and attention to space Dr. Robert G. Czako, M.D., F.A.C.E.P Diplomate American Board of Emergency Medicine Fellow American College of Emergency Physicians Trained at University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center On Staff at Eisenhower Medical Center since 1985 Practicing Primary Care and Emergency Medicine for over 24 years in the Coachella Valley Boutique Care Without The Cost Accepting Most Major Insurances & Medicare Executive Physicals Same Day Appointments Most Testing Performed In House Medical Clearance and Pre-Operative Evaluations Heart Health Screenings Minor Surgery Now Accepting New Patients 73-211 Fred Waring Dr., #101 Palm Desert (Across From McCallum Theatre) email: [email protected] 760/ 837-0321 www.staturgentcare.com DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 39 theGoodlife Bigger May Still be Better There has been talk of Millennials becoming the "first tinyhouse generation,” but according to the California Association of Realtors, the California housing market appears once again to favor larger, more expensive homes as part of a long-term trend. According to the National Home Builders Association, the average size of an American single-family home ballooned 140 percent in the past 60 years, from 983 square feet in 1950 to a monstrous 2,679 square feet, the largest ever, in 2013. The graph below, from the American Enterprise Institute and based on data from the U.S. Census, plots the size of American homes against the size of its households from 1973 to 2013. The size of the average American house has grown consistently, even as the average U.S. household size has decreased. and the use of space. Bigger homes have bigger payments, larger tax bills, more maintenance and more of your hard-earned time and money sunk into four walls, a kitchen, bathrooms and bedrooms. These tiny homes come in all shapes, sizes and forms but they all have one focus in common: smaller spaces and simplified living. Some are sparse and efficient, created from repurposed cargo containers with multi-purposed amenities that keep costs and space requirements small, while others boast chandeliers and gilded ceilings, gold-plated faucets and the latest in high-tech gadgets. Thousands of tiny homes are popping up all across the country, located in backyards, recreational vehicle parks and illegally on privately owned land. Now that the Tiny House movement has gained popularity and the trend shows no sign of fading, advocates have turned to developing Tiny House communities. They're trying to change zoning laws to make it easier for Tiny House owners to live legally. Tiny-home enthusiasts have been working around zoning laws and insurance struggles for nearly two decades. To circumvent the laws, the homes are built on trailers usually about eight feet by 20 feet, which allows cities and insurance companies to consider the homes as RVs. But that's not a perfect solution because many urban areas and cities don't allow camping on city lots, even in a backyard, and RV parks limit how long a person can stay. Some metropolitan areas are more welcoming to these tiny homes than others. Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington, are known as "tiny-house friendly" urban areas, though zoning laws still prevent these homes on permanent foundations from being the primary unit on a lot. Many of these houses are placed illegally, but they are left alone until someone objects. In most towns, tiny homes are in a legal gray area, and unless someone complains, they're usually left alone. The trouble for many owners is simply the idea of living illegally. Because of their size and low costs, tiny homes are also being constructed in urban areas as a solution for the chronically homeless and for their space and cost savings. The movement has increasingly become the interest of affordable-housing advocates. Many advocates hope that the Tiny House movement will help solve the affordable housing crisis and provide an alternative to stigmatized trailer parks and low-income housing. Many believe that Americans' desires to downsize and leave cities for more affordable living won't go away. That's why, many say these small homes are here to stay, and it could be one way that some small towns and cities can put life and commerce back into their communities. Owners of tiny homes aren't spending money on their mortgages, so they have more discretionary cash to spend on other things. 40 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Movement or Trend? Although the Tiny House movement has picked up some impressive momentum over the past few years, statistics still show that we American homeowners want our space. We want our homes to reflect our lives, to entertain and to be the social hub of our lives. But there is still a lot we can learn from this Tiny House movement: lessons of efficient planning and use of space, integrating technology and living within our means. And maybe, just maybe, being more content with less. It’s still ok to want our dream home, but perhaps we need to think more about our real dreams. If we don’t have to worry about making a house payment, we can spend more time with our families and friends and have more freedom to explore our world and actually pursue our dreams. Maybe tiny homes are both a movement and a trend. ________________________________________________ Jenell Fontes is a contributor to Desert Golf & Tennis and a premier luxury agent with Windermere Real Estate BRE#01833698. Contact her at 760.831.4126 or [email protected] lifestyle desertgolfandtennis.com The Finest Dining, Autos, Jewelry, Fashion & Travel Arnold Palmer’s Restaurant By Janet Newcomb Eureka! fineDining Kaiser Grille P alm Springs and environs are experiencing a culinary explosion, thanks to the area’s international media coverage of annual events such as the Coachella and Stagecoach Music Festivals, Modernism Week and the venerable Palm Springs International Film Festival. Here are some of the newer Coachella Valley restaurants that are attracting much deserved attention. the stars” Martyn Lawrence-Bullard, with French Laundry-trained Chef Greg Stillman in the kitchen. Quinoa-crusted halibut, chipotle-braised short rib, albacore tuna melt and smoked-salmon eggs Benedict are among the daily offerings. Dining around the adjacent swimming pool is a treat in the winter. colonypalmshotel.com Purple Palm Eureka! (74985 Hwy. 111, Indian Wells; 760.834.7700) opened a year ago, the 12th of an upscale California chain of gourmet burgers and more. There are ten unique burgers on the menu, including Catalina bison burger with bacon-infused Kaiser Grille (74-040 Hwy. 111, Palm Desert; 760.779.9888) is the offshoot of a popular Palm Springs restaurant that Kaiser Morcus opened in 1992, which became the foundation of a local business with many popular eateries. In August, the family’s long-standing Chop House restaurant in Palm Desert was redesigned as a second Kaiser Grille, with high ceilings, roomy booths and huge windows. There’s a lot of creativity here, with interesting drinks including the jalapeño margarita and flavorful, creative entrées such as sesame-and-black-peppercrusted ahi tuna with pan-seared, stirfried veggies. Employees were recruited mostly from other Kaiser restaurants, so the service is friendly and efficient. kaisergrillepalmdesert.com Purple Palm (572 N. Indian Canyon Drive, Palm Springs; 760. 969.1800) is in the Colony Palms Hotel, a hangout for Purple Gang mobsters and a drinking, gambling and mischief-making destination for the Hollywood elite in the 1940s. The restaurant recently reopened after a summer-long renovation by “designer to DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 43 fineDining Shabu Shabu Zen & Sake Bar Eureka! jalapeno jam and smoked mozzarella; Fresno fig burger with fig marmalade, melted goat cheese and bacon; and a veggie beet burger with a red beet and kidney-bean patty – all served with 44 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 delicious hand-cut fries. Also on the menu are sandwiches, salads and signature dishes such as fried-chicken sliders, flatiron steak and an all-day breakfast burrito. eurekarestaurantgroup.com Shabu Shabu Zen & Sake Bar (71680 Hwy. 111, Rancho Mirage; 760.779.5000) specializes in the Japanese tradition of shabu shabu, a meal of thinly sliced meat, fish or tofu and vegetables, which diners cook in broth at the table and dip into assorted sauces. Choices include Washu (Kobe-style beef), Prime Angus rib eye, Mugi-Fuji Japanese American pork, sashimi-grade yellowtail, salmon and shrimp. The sake list includes the exquisite Tedorigawa Tsuyu Do-Do (A Thousand Drops of Dew) by the bottle ($150) along with sake flights, sake by the glass, wine and beer. shabu-shabu-zen.com fineDining Arnold Palmer’s Restaurant Workshop Kitchen + Bar Arnold Palmer’s Restaurant (78164 52nd Ave., La Quinta; 760.771.4653) really is owned by Arnold Palmer and it’s filled with golf memorabilia in the Masters Room, the British Open Room, the U.S. Open Room, the Palmer Room and the Wine Room. Celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, it’s a favorite for locals and visitors who enjoy the clubby atmosphere and the bar with live music nightly. The menu is a mix of meat, poultry and fish items along with some of Arnie’s favorite comfort foods such as oldfashioned pot roast, mac and cheese and Arnie’s famous meatloaf. The recently remodeled wine room contains 2,500 bottles, along with a chef’s table for private parties. There’s also an outdoor sports lounge with a private bar, big-screen TVs and oversized patio furniture. arnoldpalmersrestaurant.com Brussels sprouts, quinoa, beets and baby kale, and inventive entrées such as honey and white shoyu-glazed black cod with roasted cauliflower, cauliflower purée, macerated golden raisins and pink beets. workshoppalmsprings.com Workshop Kitchen + Bar (800 N. Palm Canyon Drive, Palm Springs; 760.459.3451) has a sleek, industrial look suitable in this now-hip city that is revered internationally for its mid-century modern architecture and design. Acclaimed chef-owner Michael Beckman and co-owner Joseph Mourani, an accomplished restaurateur and architect, have won accolades in local and national media for their fresh, wholesome approach to dining. The menu, which changes with the seasons, includes super foods including DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 45 fineDining La Brasserie Bistro & Bar (78-477 Hwy. 111, La Quinta; 760.771.4400) truly feels like a Parisian café. Chef Emmanuel Janin and his wife, Kara, provide exceptional food along with warm hospitality that has already won them “Best French Restaurant” from Palm Springs Life readers and “Best of the Valley” from Desert Magazine readers. The lunch menu includes crêpes, quiche and tarts, as well as a signature half-pound burger with cheddar cheese, bacon, pickled caramelized red onions and chipotle ketchup. Dinner entrees range from cassoulet with duck-leg confit and Toulouse sausage to sesame-andcoriander-crusted ahi tuna Niçoise and grilled flatiron bistro steak. labrasserielaquinta.com ______________________________ Janet Newcomb is a staff writer with Desert Golf & Tennis La Brasserie Bistro & Bar 46 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 By Aaron Atwood luxuryAutos H ello World! BMW has broken the mold and challenged all assumptions regarding what a sports car can and ought to be. The BMW i8 takes on all comers in a hybrid cage match made for a Vegas promoter. It’s sexy, powerful and loaded, and at 94 mpg, you’ll feel great about driving it every day. You’ll look great driving it as well, turning heads because it’s impossible not to stare at this inspiring design. The Lamborghini-like scissor doors only add to the feeling that you’re driving something very special. You won’t be mistaken for driving a 5-series Bimmer in the i8. This is new. In fact, BMW put design controls into the hands of an entirely new division in its Bavarian headquarters. Nothing about the i8 says, “I’m a cousin of the M Drive.” The values of the I Division seem to rank sustainability heavily along with innovation. The feeling you get when you lift the cover on the i8 is inspiring. Aluminum chassis, bolts (instead of steel) and wiring (instead of copper) help make the i8 a lightweight in the luxury sports-car division. At a curb weight of just over 3,200 lbs., it’s comparable to most coupes. Granted, the backseat of the i8 is probably better for storing your sunglasses than your kids, but the wheelbase on the i8 is long like a sedan. BMW took pains to use special glass in the rear window and ductwork in the heating/cooling system to save weight, ideas that may set the trend for decades to come. Not to mention that sitting in the i8 may send you immediately into the future of car making. In summary, the Tesla Model S is probably the closest competition and it weighs in at 4,600 pounds. Lucky for BMW that these two aren’t in a boxing match. Don’t misunderstand; there are plenty of features that make the i8 a BMW to the core. The grill features the kidney shape that has defined BMW forever. BMW blue trim rings several of the interior and exterior features, and the all-familiar chevron on DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 49 luxuryAutos the hood ensures it’s branded as one of the best in the business. But the body on this beauty was not modeled after her daddy’s BMW. One look at the hood with its venting, lines and mean-looking curves will have you clamoring. This is the best-looking BMW ever. It has more athleticism than the M6 and enough class to put Mercedes and Jaguar on their heels. The bodylines are dynamic. The doors are creased lengthwise and scooped at the handles. You may want to do some stretching before entering or exiting the wing-style doors, but even just putting those doors up and gazing at the i8 is too much fun to miss. Try it out in downtown Denver and you’ll instantly have 50 new best friends—this car is a people magnet. For all the technology that goes into making the i8, you won’t find yourself 50 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 luxuryAutos challenge you to point out any hint of artificiality. The i8 is a contender and will raise your heart rate and your status on any street in the USA. _______________________________ Aaron Atwood is a contributing writer to Desert Golf & Tennis Where to Test Drive the i8 fumbling to make it work. It works like a car, not nuclear power plant. That said there is a load of work going on inside to make the three-cylinder gas engine marry well with the electric motor. The electric motor works only the front wheels; the gas engine powers a six-speed transmission on the rear wheels, providing instant all-wheel drive. Now, let’s talk numbers. The 1.5-liter, three-cylinder gas engine is a directinjected, turbo-charged powerhouse. It’s the Sugar Ray Leonard of the motor world. With 231 horsepower and 236 pound-feet of torque, this little engine absolutely can and does pack a punch. The left hook that is the combustion engine is followed by a right-hand electric motor. The electric motor produces 129 horsepower (96 kilowatts) and 184 pound-feet of torque. Together, the two generate 362 horsepower and 420 pound-feet of torque. This output gets a 0-60 time of 4.2 seconds according to BMW. A quartermile is covered in just over 12 seconds. These are true sports-car numbers. And with a limited top speed of 155 mph, there’s plenty of performance for everyone. The AWD makes driving the i8 fun—even the engine note is awesome. Though BMW had to generate the engine noise by pumping it through the speakers, I BMW of Palm Springs 3737 E. Palm Canyon Drive Palm Springs, CA 92264 760.324.7071 bmwps.com BMW of Las Vegas 6900 West Sahara Avenue Las Vegas, NV 89117 702.570.0279 desertbmwoflasvegas.com BMW of North Scottsdale 18018 North Scottsdale Road Phoenix, AZ 85054 800.628.9104 bmwnorthscottsdale.com DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 51 By Diane Marlin-Dirkx Lexi Thompson Michelle Wie stylereport Y ou’re a fan. And a player. Whether you’re a weekend duffer, a dreamer on the rise scorecard by scorecard or a pro racking up majors, you know that every stance, stroke and follow-through has its own personality, an identity distinguished player by player. You know who you are and you honestly claim ownership. Good, bad, or indifferent, you’ll stick with that grip on your favorite club, that wiggle or waggle before you send the dimpled ball soaring into what you hope will be history, or at least a marker on your personal history of the game. You have a style all your own. So, too, do the LPGA’s best-known champions. Take Michelle Wie, Lexi Thompson and Christie Kerr. These players express themselves from tee-off to final putt. They’re identified by the way they physically hold themselves posture to posture as they play the course—their smiles, pursed lips, grimaces, attitudes— and by their camaraderie with competitors. They’re often identified by their personal style, ref lected in their fashionforward outfits tailored for comfort, ease, practicality and, darn it, attractiveness. Here’s our take on the trio and their fashionable profiles, which differ significantly. The only consistency among these three is the ponytail flying from the back of their caps or visors. Personal preference rules. Let’s look into “why” and “how.” (You might want to think Holiday gift giving!) Michelle Wie Lithe, lean, tall and equipped with a mega-watt smile belying her Amazonian power, Wie startles her fan-base by dressing in blue delicacy cap-to-toe. Or she will slip into bold blocks of color: a swath of turquoise shirt tucked into purple shorts, a white belt with a hubcap-size buckle. Hailed as stylish for introducing the protective wide-brimmed visor, Wie is a smooth operator, locked and loaded for aggressive but friendly play on the sun-brutal greens. With the figure and height of a model, Wie looks terrific in any silhouette. When not sporting sponsor Nike’s swoosh, Wie is a traditionalist with a modernist streak who may choose to protect her delicate skin in a “vintage” floral long-sleeve shirt by San Soleil embedded with 50 SPF. Alexis (Lexi) Thompson After becoming the second youngest major champion in LPGA history when she won the 2014 Kraft Nabisco Championship, Thompson achieved superstar status, earning extra course creds by outplaying fellow six-footer Michelle Wie at the Kraft Nabisco Championship in Rancho Mirage, California, earlier this year. She’s a go-to fashionista with competitive confidence, plus she adds a fresh all-American beauty to the out-of-doors game. Her easy-does-it game strategy might include a comfortable polyester/spandex stretch tunicshirt with striking pink and purple prints—a winning combo with stretch capri pants. Both pieces are embedded with sunthwarting 45 SPF by Tail Golf Apparel. Cristie Kerr A formidable presence at just 5-foot-3, Kerr is a leftie playing with a determined right hand. In fact, determination is part of her style. When back spasms threatened the professional career she has pursued since the age of eight, she lost 50 lbs. And for actively raising funds for research with her own Birdies for Breast Cancer foundation, Kerr received the 2006 LPGA Susan G. Komen Award. Known for setting goals and achieving them, this passionate golfer is highly regarded for her putting skills Cristie Kerr conducted with a quiet resolve, a hallmark of her personal game strategy. Fashion-wise, she favors the drama of black, black and white or eye-candy pink. Then again, for a chilly, early morning game, this royal ultramarine jacket in polyester/spandex with ladylike ruching teams perfectly with a graphic half-moon-print pull-on skort by Tail Golf Apparel. _______________________________ Diane Marlin-Dirkx is a staff writer with Desert Golf & Tennis Shopping Notes: Where to Find Your On-Course Style Pete Carlson’s Golf & Tennis 73741 Hwy. 111 Palm Desert, California DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 53 By Alison Elsner The Roberto Coin Pois Moi Collection Tiffany & Co. T Square Bracelet Tudor Ranger Heritage Collection 54 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 fineJewelry N avigating the world of fine jewelry, watches and luxury accessories depends a lot on personal style and taste. However, these elements are often accompanied by an overriding sense of trust for the brand that has established high levels of elegance, quality and consistency. Tudor wristwatches embody this trust and reliability. From the creators of Rolex, the new 2014 Tudor Black Bay is a modern dive watch derivative of vintage Submariners. This newest version uses midnight blue bezels rather than the traditional burgundy to connote the famous military Submariners issued to the French Marine Nationale in the 1970s. The timepiece features a 41mm case with a polished satin finish and is 10mm thick with a white silver dial design that surrounds a matte black base and snowflake hands. The screw-down steel crown displays the distinctive Tudor rose and is waterproof to 200 meters. The steel bracelet version sells for $3,425. Tudor has also added the Ranger to its Heritage collection. Suggesting a rugged, outdoorsy theme, this piece is inspired by the Ranger of the late 1960s, drawing upon the military-style watch of the same brand introduced in 1967. This handsome, bold watch features a domed sapphire crystal with a high-contrast dial and painted, domed numerals at 12, 3, 6, and 9 o’clock to create greater dimension. The paint includes Super Lumi-Nova for high visibility. The distinctive brown leather bund strap runs underneath the watch head and is especially tailored to the watch with a tapered oval to fit the shape of the case. The thin edges are painted black with white stitches along the sides and leather that runs through the crosspieces. This beauty is available for $2,825, and there’s also a steel-bracelet version for $2,950. Both options are powered by automatic Caliber 2824, measure 41mm in diameter, have a satin-finished folding clasp and safety catch, are waterproof to 150 meters and come with an additional fabric strap in a special woven camouflage pattern. Tudor timepieces are available at Leeds & Son Fine Jewelers in Palm Desert, California. Another established brand that engenders trust and confidence with buyers, wearers and admirers is Roberto Coin. The Italian designer who founded his company in Vincenza, Italy, in 1977, pioneered the use of three-color gold. He is known for blurring the lines between the timeless classic and the modern trend. In 1996, Roberto Coin started signing his jewels by setting a small 0.3 carat ruby hidden on the inside of each and every piece, allowing the distinguished gem to “kiss the skin.” This is now known as his signature. The Roberto Coin Pois Moi collection (the name playfully translates to “my dots”), was introduced last year. It features several pieces that have gained trend momentum in 2014. One special piece in this collection is the modern, rounded square four-row pave white-diamond bangle in 18-karat rose gold (7.75 carats). The cuff has a push clasp and is detailed with uniform gold rivet detail. Retailing for around $49,000, this piece offers a glamorous take on textural appeal and is inspired by television monitors of the 1950s. For a more delicate look, there’s the two-row version in 18-karat yellow gold (3.62 carats), retailing for $23,000. There’s also a one-row variant in 18-karat white gold. The Pois Moi collection has two stunning sets of pendants. The Pois Moi Dia Padlock necklace in 18-karat yellow and white gold pavé white diamond is striking in its understated boldness. Three rows of gold dots adorn the lock pendant on a cable chain, which sells for $3,900. For more drama, the same necklace is available with a white pavé diamond divot inset (0.4 carats) and retails for $5,500. Both chains measure 17 inches with a lobster clasp, and the lock pendant measures 1.5 inches high. Capturing the essence of America’s most noteworthy historical events and celebrations of romantic love – and the reputed originator of the engagement ring tradition - Tiffany & Co. has a simple yet dramatic new collection: Tiffany T. Design director Francesca Amfitheatrof, who has created her first collection for the brand, is quoted as saying, “The letter T is sculptural and bold and very closely linked to the architecture of New York City the strong, graphic form of the letter T is simplified, deconstructed and reinvented.” The Tiffany & Co. heritage as fine diamond purveyors and classic romanticism is reflected in three particular versions of the Tiffany T bracelet. The Tiffany T square bracelet is fashioned in 18-karat yellow gold and is the most direct representation of the new line. This graceful, classic piece fits wrists up to 6.25 inches and sells for $5,000. The Tiffany T cutout hinged cuff displays 18-karat yellow gold and is also 6.25 inches in circumference. This version features white ceramic surrounding the “T” design, providing a modern update. It also sells for $5,000. The Tiffany T large chain bracelet in 18-karat yellow gold is 8.25 inches in length and is available for $5,500. There are also options of the chain bracelet in 18karat rose gold ($5,500) and sterling silver ($850). One’s style and personality defines the choice of jewelry and luxury watches, but when temptation is strong and selections become challenging, it’s refreshing to know that these established brands can be counted upon for their decades of quality products and exceptional designs. ______________________________ Alison Elsner is a staff writer with Desert Golf & Tennis Shopping Guide: Where to Find These Inspiring Brands Tudor Leeds & Son Fine Jewelers 73-670 El Paseo Palm Desert, CA 92260 760.568.5266 leedsandson.com Roberto Coin Roberto Coin 73-151 El Paseo, Suite F Palm Desert, CA, 92260 760.568.2661 robertocoin.com Hyde Park Las Vegas Forum Shops 3500 Las Vegas Blvd. South Las Vegas, NV 89109 702.794.3541 Hydeparkjewelers.com Tiffany T Tiffany & Co. 73-585 El Paseo Palm Desert, CA 92260 760.341.3444 Tiffany & Co. Scottsdale Fashion Square 7014 East Camelback Road Scottsdale, AZ 85251 480.946.9100 tiffany.com DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 55 desertgolfandtennis.com coachellavalleycalifornia Coachella Valley 1. Avondale Golf Club 2. Azure Sky Resort 3. Cathedral Canyon Golf & Tennis Club 4. Deep Canyon Tennis Club 5. Desert Breezes Resort 6. Desert Falls Fitness & Tennis 7. Desert Princess Country Club 8. Freedom Park 9. Hyatt Grand Champions Resort 10. Indian Palms Vacation Club 11. Ironwood Country Club 12. Indian Wells Tennis Gardens 13. Jackie Cooper Tennis Club 14. La Quinta Resort & Club 15. Mission Hills Country Club 16. Mission Hills Croquet & Tennis Villa 17. Motorcoach Country Club 18. Mountain View Country Club 19. North Jackson Park 20. Outdoor Resort 21. Palm Desert Civic Center Park 22. Palm Desert Tennis Club 23. Palm Springs Tennis Club 24. Plaza Racquet Club 25. Panorama Park 26. Shadow Mountain Resort & Club 27. Smoke Tree Ranch 28. South Jackson Park 29. Springs Country Club 30. Sunrise Country Club 31. Tamarisk Country Club 32. The Club at PGA WEST 33. The Oasis 34. The Village Racquet Club 35. Welk Resort Desert Oasis 36. Woodhaven Country Club 56 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 The publisher and staff of Desert Golf & Tennis make every effort to ensure accuracy in our maps and directories. Should you find any errors please email us with the corrections. Our desire is for our maps and directories to remain as current as possible; with your assistance we will achieve the highest level of accuracy. We value your input. maps@desertgolf&tennis.com Avondale Golf Club (760) 777-1050, 75800 Avondale Dr, Palm Desert. Private Freedom Park (760) 568-9697, Freedom Park 77400 Country Club Dr, Palm Desert. Public Azure Sky Resort (760) 325-9109, 1661 Calle Palo Fierro Palm Springs. Resort Hyatt Grand Champions Resort (760) 341-1000, Indian Wells Ln, Indian Wells. Resort Cathedral Canyon Golf & Tennis Club. (760) 3286571, 68311 Paseo Real Cathedral City. Semiprivate Indian Palms Vacation Club (760) 342-1485, 82567 Avenue 48 Indio. Resort Deep Canyon Tennis Club (760) 568-6822, 73120 Frank Feltrop, Cir Palm Desert. Private Ironwood Country Club (760) 346-0551, 73735 Irontree Dr, Palm Desert. Private Desert Breezes Resort (760) 345-2637, 77-955 Ent Las Brisas, Palm Desert, CA 92211. Resort Indian Wells Tennis Gardens (760) 200-8400, 78200 Miles Avenue, Indian Wells. Semiprivate Desert Falls Fitness & Tennis (760) 341-1305, 1111 Desert Falls Pkwy, Palm Desert . Semiprivate Jackie Cooper Tennis Club (760) 822-4194, Palm Desert Resort & Country Club, 77333 Country Club Drive, Palm Desert. Semiprivate Desert Princess Country Club (760) 322-1655, 28555 Landau Blvd Cathedral City. Private La Quinta Resort & Club (760) 346-5683, 49-499 Eisenhower Dr, La Quinta, Resort/Semiprivate desertgolfandtennis.com tennisclubs Borrego Springs 1. Anza Borrego Tennis Center (760) 767-0577, 286 Palm Canyon Dr, Borrego Springs. Semiprivate Mission Hills Country Club (760) 324-9400, 34600 Mission Hills Dr, Rancho Mirage. Private Palm Springs Tennis Club (760) 325-1441, 701 W Baristo Rd Palm Springs. Resort Tamarisk Country Club (760) 328-2141, 70240 Frank Sinatra Drive, Rancho Mirage. Private Mission Hills Croquet & Tennis Villa (760) 575-4175, 120 Racquet Club Dr N, Rancho Mirage. Semiprivate Plaza Racquet Club (760) 323-8997, 1300 E Baristo Rd, Palm Springs. Semiprivate The Club at PGA WEST (760) 564-7111, 55-955 Pga Blvd, La Quinta. Private Motorcoach Country Club (760) 863-0789, 80-501 Avenue 48, Indio. Private Panorama Park (760) 770-0390, 28905 Avenida Maravilla. Public The Oasis (760) 324-3422, 4190 E Palm Canyon Dr, Palm Springs. Resort Mountain View Country Club (760) 771-4311, 80375 Pomelo La Quinta. Private Shadow Mountain Resort & Club (760) 346-6123, 45750 San Luis Rey Ave Palm Desert. Resort The Village Racquet Club (760) 325-3884, 900 E Ramon Rd, Palm Springs. Private Smoke Tree Ranch (760) 327-1221, 1850 Smoke Tree Ln, Palm Springs. Resort Welk Resort Desert Oasis (760) 321-9000 34567, Cathedral Canyon Dr Cathedral City. Resort South Jackson Park (760) 391-4000, 83100 Date Ave, Indio. Public Woodhaven Country Club (760) 345-7636, Woodhaven Dr E, Palm Desert. Public North Jackson Park (760) 391-4000, 43200 Towne St, Indio. Public Outdoor Resort (760) 424-8455, 69411 Ramon Rd Cathedral City. Resort Palm Desert Civic Center Park (760) 346-0611, 73510 Fred Waring Drive, Palm Desert. Public Palm Desert Tennis Club (760) 346-5683, 48240 Racquet Ln, Palm Desert. Private Springs Country Club (760) 324-8292, 1 Duke Dr Rancho Mirage. Private Sunrise Country Club (760) 328-6549, 71-601 Country Club Drive, Rancho Mirage. Private DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 57 desertgolfandtennis.com Phoenix&tucsonArizona Phoenix Arizona 1. Ahwatukee Tennis Center 2. Carefree Tennis and Bike Ranch 3. Camelback Village Racquet, Health Club 4. Chandler Tennis Center 5. Club SAR Fitness Center 6. Copper Wynd 7. Gainey Ranch 8. Gene Autry Sports Complex 9. Gold Key Racquet Club 10. Granada Park 11. Kiwanis Recreation Center 12. La Camarilla Racquet, FSC 13. Mt View Tennis Center 14. Mariposa Park 15. Paradise Valley Country Club 16. Paseo Racquet Center 17. Playa Margarita Park 18. Phoenix Country Club 19. Phoenix Tennis Center 20. Pinnacle Peak Country Club 21. Pointe Hilton Squaw Peak Resort 22. Racquet Club Condo Rental 23. Rose Mofford Sports Complex 24. Sanctuary Camelback Mountain Resort 25. Scottsdale Resort & Athletic Club 26. Surprise Tennis Complex 27. Thunderbird Park 28. Villa de Paz Recreation Association 29. Vistas Recreation Center Ahwatukee Tennis Center (480) 893-3431, 4700 E Warner Rd, Phoenix. Semiprivate Carefree Tennis and Bike Ranch (480) 488-7106, 37220 N Mule Train Road, Carefree 58 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Camelback Village Racquet and Health Club (602) 840-6412, 4444 East Camelback Road, Phoenix. Semiprivate Granada Park (602) 262-6696, 6505 North 20th Avenue, Phoenix. Public Chandler Tennis Center (480) 782-2650, 2250 S McQueen Rd, Chandler. Public Kiwanis Recreation Center (480) 350-5201 ,6111 S All America Way, Tempe. Public La Camarilla Racquet, Fitness and Swim Club (480) 998-3388, 5320 East Shea Boulevard, Scottsdale. Private Club SAR Fitness Center (480) 312-2669, 8055 E. Camelback Road, Scottsdale. Private Copper Wynd (480) 333-1842, 13325 North Eagle Ridge Drive, Fountain Hills. Resort Gainey Ranch (480) 951-0321, 7720 East Gainey Ranch Road, Scottsdale. Private Gene Autry Sports Complex (480) 654-3787, 4125 E McKellips Rd, Mesa. Public Gold Key Racquet Club (602) 993-1900, 12826 N 3rd St, Phoenix. Semiprivate Mt View Tennis Center (602) 534-2500, 1104 E Grovers Ave, Phoenix. Public Mariposa Park (602) 262-6575, 3203 West Morten Avenue, Phoenix. Public Paradise Valley Country Club (602) 840-8100, 7101 N Tatum Blvd, Paradise Valley. Private Paseo Racquet Center (623) 979-1234, 6268 Thunderbird Road, Glendale Public desertgolfandtennis.com tennisclubs Phoenix (cont.) Playa Margarita Park (602) 262-6716, 3615 West Roeser Road, Phoenix. Public Phoenix Country Club (602) 263-5208, 2901 N 7th St, Phoenix. Private Phoenix Tennis Center (602) 249-3712, 6330 N 21st Ave, Phoenix. Public Pinnacle Peak Country Club (480) 585-6992, 8701 East Pinnacle Peak Road, Scottsdale. Private Pointe Hilton Squaw Peak Resort (602) 997-2626, 7677 North 16th Street, Phoenix. Resort Racquet Club Condo Rental (602) 316-6738, 9708 East Vía Linda, Scottsdale. Resort Rose Mofford Sports Complex (602) 261-8011, 9833 N 25th Ave, Phoenix. Public Sanctuary Camelback Mountain Resort & Spa (480) 948-2100, 5700 East McDonald Drive, Paradise Valley. Resort Tucson Arizona Scottsdale Resort & Athletic Club (480) 344-0600, 8235 East Indian Bend Road, Scottsdale. Resort Surprise Tennis Complex (623) 222-2400, 14469 W Paradise Ln, Surprise. Public Thunderbird Park (480) 312-7275, 9170 E. Thunderbird Road, Scottsdale. Public Villa de Paz Recreation Association (623) 877-9179, 10320 W Campbell Ave, Phoenix. Private Vistas Recreation Center (623) 566-6178, 18823 N Country Club Pkwy, Peoria. Public Tucson Ft Lowell Tennis Center (520) 791-2584, 2900 North Craycroft Road, Tucson. Public Himmel Park Tennis Center (520) 791-3276, 1000 N. Tucson Blvd, Tucson. Public Quail Valley Tennis Club (520) 888-6163, 5550 N Oracle Rd, Tucson. Public Reffkin Tennis Center (520) 791-4896, 50 South Alvernon Way, Tucson. Public Hilton Tucson El Conquistador Golf and Tennis Resort (520) 544-5000, 10000 N Oracle Rd, Tucson. Resort Saguaro Aquatics & Tennis (520) 638-8040, 2045 W Omar Dr, Tucson. Private Sarver Tennis Center at the Tucson Jewish Community Center (520) 299-3000, 3800 E River Rd Tucson. Private Skyline Country Club (520) 299-1111, 5200 North Saint Andrews Drive, Tucson. Private 1. Ft Lowell Tennis Center 2. Himmel Park Tennis Center 3. Quail Valley Tennis Club 4. Reffkin Tennis Center 5. Hilton Tucson El Conquistador Golf & Tennis Resort 6. Saguaro Aquatics & Tennis 7. Sarver Tennis Center at the Tucson Jewish Community Center 8. Skyline Country Club 9. The Highlands at Dove Mountain 10. Tucson Racquet & Fitness Club 11. Westward Look Wyndham Grand Resort and Spa The Highlands at Dove Mountain (520) 579-9574, 4949 W Heritage Club Blvd, Marana. Private Tucson Racquet & Fitness Club (520) 795-6960, 4001 North Country Club Road, Tucson. Private Westward Look Wyndham Grand Resort and Spa (520) 297-1151, 245 E Ina Rd, Tucson. Resort The publisher and staff of Desert Golf & Tennis make every effort to ensure accuracy in our maps and directories. Should you find any errors please email us with the corrections. Our desire is for our maps and directories to remain as current as possible; with your assistance we will achieve the highest level of accuracy. We value your input. maps@desertgolf&tennis.com DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 59 desertgolfandtennis.com lasvegas 60 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 desertgolfandtennis.com tennisclubs Las Vegas 1. Alexis Park Resort Hotel 1. Bally’s Las Vegas Hotel and Casino 1. The Carriage House 1. Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas 1. Flamingo Tennis 1. The Flamingo Las Vegas 1. Frank and Vicki Fertitta Tennis Complex 1. Harrah’s Las Vegas 1. Las Vegas Hilton 1. LVH - Las Vegas Hotel & Casino 1. Monte Carlo Resort and Casino 1. Polo Towers 1. Treasure Island 2. Aliante Nature Discovery Park 3. Angel Park 4. Anthem Country Club 5. Arbors Tennis & Play Park 6. Bill & Lillie Heinrich YMCA 7. Bruce Trent Park 8. Canyon Gate Country Club 9. Club De Soleil 10. ClubSport Green Valley 11. Darling Tennis Center 12. Desert Palm Tennis Club 13. Dragonridge Country Club 14. Gardens Park 15. Las Vegas Motorcoach Resort 16. Lorenzi Park Tennis Courts 17. Madeira Canyon Park 18. Palms Casino Resort 19. Paseo Verde Park 20. Paul Meyer Park 21. Peccole Ranch Tennis Club 22. The Plaza Hotel and Casino 23. Pro Tennis Inc. 24. Rafael Rivera Park 25. Riviera Hotel & Casino 26. Rodeo Park 27. Spa At Southern Highlands 28. Sunset Park 29. The Vistas Park 30. The Westin Lake Las Vegas Resort & Spa 31. The Willows Park 32. Trail Canyon Park Alexis Park Resort Hotel (702) 796-3310, 375 East Harmon Ave, Las Vegas. Resort Aliante Nature Discovery Park (702) 633-2418, 2600 Nature Park Dr North Las Vegas. Public Angel Park (702) 229-6011, Angel Park Trail, Las Vegas. Public Anthem Country Club (702) 614-5000, 1 Club Side Dr, Henderson. Private Arbors Tennis & Play Park (702) 233-5831, 610 Far Hills Ave Las Vegas. Public Bally’s Las Vegas Hotel and Casino (702) 967-4111, 3645 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas. Resort Bill & Lillie Heinrich YMCA (702) 877-9622, 4141 Meadows Ln Las Vegas. Public Madeira Canyon Park (702) 267-5840, 2390 Democracy Dr Henderson. Public Bruce Trent Park (702) 229-6718, N Rampart, Las Vegas. Public Monte Carlo Resort and Casino (702) 730-7777, 3770 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas. Resort The Carriage House (702) 798-1020, 105 E Harmon Ave, Las Vegas. Resort Canyon Gate Country Club (702) 605-0643, 2001 Canyon Gate Dr Las Vegas. Private Palms Casino Resort (702) 942-7777, 4321 W Flamingo Rd, Las Vegas. Resort Paseo Verde Park (702) 267-5840, 1840 Desert Shadow Trl, Henderson. Public Club De Soleil (702) 507-9400, 5625 W Tropicana Ave Las Vegas. Resort Paul Meyer Park 7442 Coffeyville Ave Las Vegas. Public ClubSport Green Valley (702) 454-6000, 2100 Olympic Ave, Henderson. Private Peccole Ranch Tennis Club (702) 255-3351, 9501 Red Hills Rd Las Vegas. Private Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (702) 698-7000, 3708 S Las Vegas Blvd Las Vegas. Resort The Plaza Hotel and Casino (702) 386-2110, 1 S Main St, Las Vegas. Resort Darling Tennis Center (702) 229-2100, 7901 W Washington Ave, Las Vegas. Public Desert Palm Tennis Club (702) 368-2800, 3090 S Jones Blvd, Las Vegas. Public Dragonridge Country Club (702) 614-4444, 552 S Stephanie St, Henderson. Private Flamingo Tennis (702) 733-3444, 3555 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas. Public The Flamingo Las Vegas (702) 733-3111, 3555 Las Vegas Boulevard South, Las Vegas. Resort Frank and Vicki Fertitta Tennis Complex (702) 895-3011, 854-886 E Harmon Ave, Las Vegas. Public Gardens Park (702) 562-4890, 10401 Garden Park Dr, Las Vegas. Public Harrah’s Las Vegas (702) 369-5000, 3475 South Las Vegas Boulevard. Resort Las Vegas Hilton (702) 732-5111, 3000 Paradise Rd, Las Vegas. Resort Las Vegas Motorcoach Resort 8175 Arville Street Las Vegas. Resort LVH - Las Vegas Hotel & Casino (702) 897-9300, 3000 Paradise Rd, Las Vegas. Public Polo Towers (702) 261-1000, 3745 South Las Vegas Boulevard, Las Vegas. Resort Pro Tennis Inc. (702) 732-1861 3000, Joe W Brown Dr, Las Vegas. Private Rafael Rivera Park (702) 229-6718, 2998 E Stewart Ave, Las Vegas. Public Riviera Hotel & Casino (702) 734-5110, 2901 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas. Resort Rodeo Park (702) 267-5710, 810 Aspen Peak Loop, Henderson. Public Spa At Southern Highlands 3663 Robert Trent Jones Ln, Las Vegas. Resort Sunset Park (702) 455-8200, 2601 E Sunset Rd, Las Vegas. Public The Vistas Park (702) 229-2330, 11311 Alta Dr, Las Vegas. Public The Westin Lake Las Vegas Resort & Spa (702) 836-5900, 160 E Flamingo Rd, Las Vegas. Resort The Willows Park (702) 240-6500, 2775 Desert Marigold Ln, Las Vegas. Public Trail Canyon Park 1065 Trail Canyon Rd, Henderson. Public Treasure Island 3300 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas. Resort Lorenzi Park Tennis Courts (702) 229-486, W Washington Ave, Las Vegas. Public DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 61 desertgolfandtennis.com PrivatetennisclubsDirectory coachellavalley CLUB Avondale Golf Club Deep Canyon Tennis Club Desert Princess Country Club Iron Wood Country Club Mission Hills Country Club Motorcoach Country Club Mountain View Country Club Palm Desert Tennis Club Sunrise Country Club Tamarisk Country Club The Club at PGA WEST The Springs Country Club The Village Racquet Club ADDRESS 75800 Avondale Dr., Palm Desert, CA 92211 73120 Frank Feltrop, Palm Desert, CA 92260 28555 Landau Blvd, Cathedral City, CA 92234 73735 Irontree Dr., Palm Desert, CA 92260 34600 Mission Hills Dr., Rancho Mirage, CA 92270 80-501 Avenue 48, Indio, CA 92201 80375 Pomelo, La Quinta, CA 92253 48240 Racquet Ln., Palm Desert, CA 92260 71-601 Country Club Drive, Rancho Mirage, CA 92270 70240 Frank Sinatra Drive, Rancho Mirage, CA 92270 55-955 Pga Blvd, La Quinta, CA 92253 1 Duke Dr, Rancho Mirage, CA 92270 951 Village Square South, Palm Springs CA, 92262 PHONE NUMBER OF COURTS (760) 345-2727 (760) 568-6822 (760) 322-1655 (760) 346-0551 (760) 324-9400 (760) 863-0789 (760) 771-4311 (760) 346-5683 (760) 328-6549 (760) 328-2141 (760) 564-7111 (760) 324-8292 (760) 325-3884 1 13 10 13 34 3 4 8 13 6 19 11 3 Phoenix&tucson Phoenix CLUB Club SAR Fitness Center Gainey Ranch La Camarilla Racquet, FSC Paradise Valley Country Club Phoenix Country Club Pinnacle Peak Country Club Villa de Paz Recreation Assoc. ADDRESS PHONE NUMBER OF COURTS 8055 E. Camelback Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 7720 East Gainey Ranch Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85258 5320 E Shea Blvd, Scottsdale, AZ 85254 7101 N Tatum Blvd, Paradise Valley, AZ 85253 2901 N 7th St, Phoenix, AZ 85014 8701 E Pinnacle Peak Rd, Scottsdale, AZ 85255 10320 W Campbell Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85037 (480) 312-2669 (480) 951-0321 (480) 998-3388 (602) 840-8100 (602) 263-5208 (480) 585-6992 (623) 877-9179 13 7 16 9 10 2 2 3800 E River Rd, Tucson, AZ 85718 5200 E. St. Andrews Dr, Tucson, AZ 85718 4949 W Heritage Club Blvd, Marana, AZ 85658 4001 N Country Club Rd, Tucson, AZ 85716 (520) 299-3000 (520) 299-1111 (520) 579-9574 (520) 795-6960 6 6 4 33 PHONE NUMBER OF COURTS (702) 614-5000 (702) 605-0643 (702) 454-6000 (702) 614-4444 (702) 734-1122 (702) 255-3351 (702) 304-5600 6 5 14 5 6 4 9 Tucson Sarver Tennis Center Skyline Country Club The Highlands at Dove Mtn Tucson Racquet & Fitness Club lasvegas CLUB Anthem Country Club Canyon Gate Country Club ClubSport Green Valley Dragonridge Country Club Las Vegas Country Club Peccole Ranch Tennis Club Red Rock Country Club 62 ADDRESS 1 Club Side Dr, Henderson, NV 89052 2001 Canyon Gate Dr., Las Vegas, NV 89117 2100 Olympic Avenue, Henderson, NV 89014 1400 Foothills Village Dr., Henderson, NV 89012 3000 Joe Brown Drive, Las Vegas, NV 89109 9501 Red Hills Rd., Las Vegas, NV 89117 2250 Red Springs Dr., Las Vegas, NV 89135 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 desertgolfandtennis.com coachellavalleycalifornia Coachella Valley 1. Andulusia at Coral Mountain 2. Avondale Golf Club 3. Bermuda Dunes Country Club 4. Bighorn Golf Club 5. Calimesa Country Club 6. Indian Canyons Golf Resort 7. Cathedral Canyon Country Club 8. Chaparral Country Club 9. Cimarron Golf Resort 10. Classic Club 11. Date Palm Country Club 12. Desert Dunes Golf Course 13. Desert Falls Country Club 14. Desert Horizons Country Club 15. Desert Island Golf & Country Club 16. Desert Princess Country Club 17. Desert Willow Golf Course 18. Eldorado Country Club 20. Heritage Palms Golf Course 21. The Hideaway 22. Indian Canyons Golf Resort 23. Indian Palms Country Club 24. Indian Springs Golf & Country Club 25. Indian Ridge Country Club 26. Indian Wells Country Club 27. Indian Wells Golf Resort 28. Indio Golf Club 29. Ironwood Country Club 30. Ivey Ranch Country Club 31. La Quinta Country Club 32. La Quinta Resort & Club 33. The Lakes Country Club 34. Marrakesh Country Club 35. Marriott’s Desert Springs Resort 36. Marriott’s Shadow Ridge Resort 37. Mesquite Country Club 38. Mission Lakes Country Club 39. Mission Hills Country Club 40. Monterey Country Club 43. Morningside, The Club at 41. Mountain View CC at La Quinta 42. Mountain Vista GC at Sun City 44. Oasis Country Club 45. Outdoor Resort & Country Club 47. Palm Desert Resort Country Club 48. Palm Desert Greens Country Club 49. Palm Royale Country Club 50. Palm Springs Country Club 51. Palm Valley Country Club 52. The Palms Golf Club 53. PGA West: Arnold Palmer: Tom Weiskopf 54. PGA West: Greg Norman Course Andulusia at Coral Mountain 760-777-1050, 58-830 Marbella Lane, La Quinta. Private/18/76.0/140/7521. Avondale Golf Club 760-345-2727, 75-800 Avondale Drive, Palm Desert. Private/18/72.4/127/6782. 64 56. Portola Country Club 57. The Quarry at La Quinta 58. Rancho La Quinta Country Club 59. Rancho Las Palmas Country Club 60. Rancho Mirage Country Club 61. The Reserve 62. Santa Rosa Country Club 63. Shadow Hills Golf Club 64. Shadow Mountain Golf Club 65. SilverRock Resort 66. The Springs Club 67. Stone Eagle Golf Club 68. Sunrise Country Club 69. Tamarisk Country Club 70. Tahquitz Creek Golf Resort 71. TERR Lago, Golf Club at 72. Thunderbird Country Club 73. Toscana Country Club 74. Tradition Golf Club 75. Trilogy Golf Club at La Quinta 76. Club at Shenandoah Springs 77. The Vintage Club 78. Westin Mission Hills Resort 79. Woodhaven Country Club 80. PGA West: Jack Nicklaus: TPC Stadium Course 81. Madison Club 82. Eagle Falls Golf Course 83. The Plantation 84. Escena Golf Club Bermuda Dunes Country Club 760-345-2771, 42-360 Adams St., Bermuda Dunes. Classic 1 & Lake Course: Private/18/70.6/123/6364 Classic 2 & Lake Course: Private/18/71.2/128/6437 Classic Course: Private/18/71.6/126/6555. Bighorn Golf Club 760-341-4653, 255 Palowet Drive, Palm Desert. The Canyons: Private/18/70.8/129/6305 Mountains: Private/18/70.1/132/6169. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Calimesa Country Club 909-795-2488, 1300 S. third Street, Calimesa. Public/18/68.3/115/5970. Cathedral Canyon Country Club desertgolfer.com, 68311 Paseo Real, Cathedral City. Lake/Mountain: Semiprivate/18/71.1/130/6510 Mountain/Arroyo: Semiprivate/18/70.9/126/6482 Lake/Arroyo: Semiprivate/18/70.3/125/6366. Chaparral Country Club 760-340-1893/100 Chaparral Drive, Palm Desert. Private/58.8/97/3913. Cimarron Golf Resort desertgolfer.com. 67-603 30th Ave., Catheradal City. Long Course: Public/18/70.5/119/6446 Short Course: Public/56.5/88/2882. Classic Club 760-601-3600, desertgolfer.com 75-200 Classic Club Blvd., Palm Desert, Public/Resort/18/72/137/7305. Club at Shenandoah Springs 760-343-3669, 32-610 Desert Moon Drive, Thousand Palms. Private/18/64.3/121/5465. Date Palm Country Club 760-328-1315, 36-200 Date Palm Dr., Cathedral City. Semiprivate/54.0/85/3083. desertgolfandtennis.com Golfclubs Indian Springs Golf & Country Club desertgolfer.com, 79-940 Westward Ho Dr., Indio. Public/18/68.7/120/6104. Indian Ridge Country Club 760-772-7272, 76-375 Country Club Dr., Palm Desert. Arroyo Course: Private/18/70.5/129/6293 Grove Course: Private/18/70.9/128/6410. Indian Wells Country Club 760-345-2561, 46-000 Club Drive, Indian Wells. Classic: Private/18/71.0/127/6478 Cove: Private/18/71.5/121/6558. Indian Wells Golf Resort desertgolfer.com, 44-500 Indian Wells Lane. Indian Wells. Resort/18/69.9/128/6135. Indio Golf Club 760-347-9156, 83-040 Avenue 42, Indio. Public/54.1/77/3004. Ironwood Country Club 760-346-0551, 73-735 IronTree Drive, Palm Desert. South Course: Private/18/75.1/133/7256 North Course: Private/18/68.8/123/6065. Ivey Ranch Country Club 760-343-2013, 74-580 Varner Road, Thousand Palms. Semiprivate/18/65.8/108/5266. La Quinta Country Club 760-564-4151, 77-750 Avenue 50, La Quinta. Private/18/71.8/131/6554. La Quinta Resort & Club desertgolfer.com, 50-200 Avenida Vista, La Quinta. Dunes: Resort/Semiprivate/18/73.4/36/6747 Mountain: Resort/Semiprivate/18/72.6/135/6700. 760-564-7620, 50-503 Jefferson St, La Quinta. Citrus: Private/18/72/7,106/113. Desert Dunes Golf Course desertgolfer.com, 19-300 Palm Drive, Desert Hot Springs. Public/18/71.1/128/6175. Eldorado Country Club 760-346-8081, 46-000 Fairway Drive, Indian Wells. Private/18/71.4/128/6534. Desert Falls Country Club desertgolfer.com, 1111 Desert Falls Pkwy, Palm Desert. Semiprivate/18/72.2/128/6702. Escena Golf Club 760-778-2737, 1100 Clubhouse View Dr., Palm Springs, Public/18/74.2/130/7173. Desert Horizons Country Club 760-340-4646, 44-900 Desert Horizons Drive, Indian Wells. Private/18/70.1/119/6163. Heritage Palms Golf Course desertgolfer.com, 44-291 Heritage Palm Drive South, Indio. Semiprivate/18/69.9/119/6293. Desert Island Golf & Country Club 760-328-2111, 71-777 Frank Sinatra Drive, Rancho Mirage. Private/18/71.6/127/6686. The Hideaway 760-777-7400, 80-349 Village Club Place, La Quinta. Clive Clark: Private/18/71.7/139/6462 Pete Dye: Private/18/72.8/137/6630. Desert Princess Country Club desertgolfer.com, 28-555 Landau Blvd., Cathedral City. Cielo-Vista Course: Resort/18/70.8/126/6366 Lagos-Cielo Course: Resort/18/70.1/124/6117 Old Course: Resort/18/70.3/123/6160 Vista-Lagos Course: Resort/18/70.5/124/6259. Desert Willow Golf Course desertgolfer.com, 38-995 Desert Willow Dr., Palm Desert.Firecliff Course: Public/18/71.7/133/6676 Mountain View Course: Pulbic/18/71.5/128/6507. Eagle Falls Golf Course desertgolfer.com 84-245 Indio Springs Pkwy., Indio Public/Resort/18/72/6820. Indian Canyons Golf Resort desertgolfer.com, South Course: 1097 E. Murray Canyon Dr., Palm Springs. Public/72 70.4/118 6582 North Course: 1100 E. Murray Canyon Dr. Palm Springs. Private/72.9/128 6943 Indian Palms Country Club desertgolfer.com, 948-630 Monroe, Indio. Indian/Mountain: Semiprivate/18/72.7/125/6633 Mountain/Royal: Semiprivate/18/71.9/130/6287 Royal/Indian: Semiprivate/18/72.8/125/6492. The Lakes Country Club 760-568-4321 161 Old Ranch Road, Palm Desert. Sount/North: Private/72.1/128/6631 North/East: Private/18/70.5/129/6371 East/South: Private/18/71.7/129/6620 Old South: Private/18/71.1/129/6439. Madison Club 760-391-4500, 53-035 Meriwether Way, La Quinta. Private/18/75.4/143/7426. Marrakesh Country Club 760-568-2688, 47-000 Marrakesh Dr., Palm Desert. Private/57.4/87/3750. Marriott’s Desert Springs Resort & Spa desertgolfer.com, 74-855 Country Club Dr., Palm Desert.Palms Course: Public/18/70.3/126/6381 Valley Course: Public/18/70.1/125/6323. Marriott’s Shadow Ridge Resort desertgolfer.com, 9002 Shadow Ridge Rd., Palm Desert. Resort/18/73.9/134/7006. Mesquite Country Club desertgolfer.com, 2700 East Mesquite Ave., Palm Springs. Public/18/68.0/118/5944. Mission Lakes Country Club 760-329-6481, 8484 Clubhouse Blvd., Desert Hot Springs. Semiprivate/18/72.1/124/6742. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 65 desertgolfandtennis.com coachellavalleycalifornia Coachella Valley continued from previous page Mission Hills Country Club 760-324-9400, 34-600 Mission Hills Dr., Rancho Mirage. Arnold Palmer Course: Private/18/72.7/132/6743 Pete Dye Challenge: Private/18/72.6/138/6582 Dinah Shore Tournament: Private/18/73.6/138/6582 Monterey Country Club 760-568-9311, 41-500 Monterey Ave., Palm Desert. East/West nines: Private/69.6/126/6185 West/South nines: Private/69.3/125/6108 East/South nines: Private/68.8/121/6005. Morningside, The Club at 760-321-1234, Morningside Drive, Rancho Mirage. Private/18/71.0/127/6404. Mountain View CC at La Quinta 760-771-4311, 80-375 Pomelo, La Quinta. Private/18/72.7/131/6773. Mountain Vista Golf Coourse at Sun City desertgolfer.com. 38-180 Del Webb Blvd., Palm Desert. San Gorgonio: Semiprivate/18/69.7/124/6202 Santa Rosa: Semiprivate/18/69.7/119/6162. Oasis Country Club 760-345-5661, 42-300 Casbah Way, Palm Desert. Semiprivate/56.2/92/3489. Outdoor Resort & Country Club 760-324-4005 Ramon Rd, Catherdral City. Private/51.1/182. Palm Desert Resort Country Club desertgolfer.com, 77-333 Country Club Dr., Palm Desert.Semiprivate/18/71.7/122/6616. Palm Desert Greens Country Club 760-346-2941, Country Club Dr., Palm Desert. Private/18/72/4079. Palm Royale Country Club 760-345-9701, 78-259 Indigo Dr., La Quinta. Public/18/54. Palm Springs Country Club desertgolfer.com, 2500 Whitewater Club Dr., Palm Springs. Public/18/69.2/125/6177. Palm Valley Country Club 760-345-2737, 39-205 Palm Valley Dr., Palm Desert. Challenge Course: Private/18/61.5/107/4439 Championship Course: Private/18/72.2/131/6545. The Palms Golf Club 760-771-2606, 57000 Palms Drive, La Quinta, Private/18/71.8/132/6642. PGA West 760-564-7100, 55-955 PGA Boulevard, La Quinta. Jack Nicklaus: Private/18/72.2/134/6522 Arnold Palmer: Private/18/71.4/133/6474 Tom Weiskopf: Private/18/71.6/123/6654. desertgolfer.com, 56-150 PGA Blvd., La Quinta. Jack Nicklaus Tourn: Semiprivate/18/72.2/134/6522 TPC Stadium Course: Semiprivate/18/73.3/142/6739 760-564-3900, 81-405 Kingston Heath, La Quinta. Greg Norman Course: Resort/71.0/122/5281. The Plantation 760-775-3688, 50994 Monroe, Indio. Private/18/71.6/128/6597. Portola Country Club 760-568-1592, 42-500 Portola Avenue, Palm Desert. Private/18/54/2,167/NR. The Quarry at La Quinta 760-777-1100, 1 Quarry Lane, La Quinta. Private/18/72.5/132/6852. Rancho La Quinta Country Club 760-777-7799, 79-301 Cascadas Circle, La Quinta. Jones Course: Private/18/71.2/129/6452 Pate Course: Private/18/71.7/135/6474. Rancho Las Palmas Country Club desertgolfer.com, 42-000 Bob Hope Dr., Rancho Mirage. West/North nines: Private/Resort/67.8/116/6113 North/South nines: Private/Resort/67.1/117/6025 South/West nines: Private/Resort/67.8/115/6128. Rancho Mirage Country Club desertgolfer.com, 38-500 Bob Hope Drive, Rancho Mirage. Semiprivate/18/69.4/122/6111. The Reserve 760-674-2240, 74-001 Reserve Drive, Indian Wells. Private/18/72.2/134/6798. Santa Rosa Country Club 760-568-5707, 38-105 Portola Avenue, Palm Desert. Private/Reciprocal/18/65.0/108/5247. Shadow Hills Golf Club 760-200-3375, 80-875 Avenue 40, Indio. Semiprivate/18/70.9/130/6442. Shadow Mountain Golf Club 760-346-8242, 73-800 Ironwood Dr., Palm Desert. Private/18/66.3/114/5393. SilverRock Resort 888-600-7272, 79-179 Ahmanson Lane, La Quinta, Public/18/76.3/139/7553. The Springs Club 760-324-8292, 1 Duke Drive, Rancho Mirage. Private/18/70.1/124/6279. Stone Eagle Golf Club 760-568-9800, 72-500 Stone Eagle Drive, Palm Desert. Private/69.8/131/6852. Sunrise Country Club 760-328-6549, 71-601 Country Club Drive, Rancho Mirage. Private/Reciprocal/56.9/85/3837. Tamarisk Country Club 760-328-2141, 70-240 Frank Sinatra Drive, Rancho Mirage. Private/18/70.0/121/6303. Tahquitz Creek Golf Resort desertgolfer.com, 1885 Golf Club Dr., Palm Springs. Legends Course: Public/18/72.3/123/6775 Resort Course: Public/18/71.8/125/6705. Terra Lago, Golf Club at desertgolfer.com, 84-000 Terra Lago Parkway, Indio. North Course: Public/18/73.7/137/7060 South Course: Public/18/74.0/124/7044. Thunderbird Country Club 760-328-2161, 70-612 Highway 111, Rancho Mirage. Private/18/70.7/129/6460. Toscana Country Club 760-404-1457, 76-007 Club Villa Drive, Indian Wells. Private/18/71.2/132/6336. Tradition Golf Club 760-564-1067, 78-505 Old Avenue 52, La Quinta. Private/18/71.0/136/6541. Trilogy Golf Club at La Quinta 760-771-0707, 60151 Trilogy Pkwy, La Quinta. Public/18/70.8/124/6455. The Vintage Club 760-340-0500, 75-001 Vintage Dr. West, Indian Wells. Desert Course: Private/18/68.8/124/5918 Mountain Course: Private/18/0.5/126/6423. Westin Mission Hills Resort desertgolfer.com, 70-705 Ramon Road, Rancho Mirage. Gary Player Signature Course: Resort/18/71.3/124/6643. 760-328-3198, 71-333 Diana Shore Dr., Rancho Mirage. Pete Dye Resort Course: Resort/18/69.6/126/6158. Woodhaven Country Club desertgolfer.com, 41-555 Woodhaven Drive East. Private/Reciprocal/18/67.1/118/5794. The publisher and staff of Desert Golf & Tennis make every effort to ensure accuracy in our maps and directories. Should you find any errors please email us with the corrections. Our desire is for our maps and directories to remain as current as possible; with your assistance we will achieve the highest level of accuracy. We value your input. maps@desertgolf&tennis.com 66 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 desertgolfandtennis.com borregospringscaliforniaGolfclubs Borrego Springs Borrego Springs Desert Island Golf & Country Club Borrego Springs Resort 760-767-5700, 1112 Tilting T Drive, Borrego Springs. Public/27/72. 1. Desert Island Golf & Country Club 2. De Anza Country Club 3. Montesoro 4. Road Runner 5. The Springs at Borrego De Anza Country Club 760-767-5105, 509 Catarina Dr., Borrego Springs. Private/18/72/70.4 /123/6385. Montesoro 760-767-5124, 1881 Rams Hill Dr., Borrego Springs. Private/18/72/72.0/123/6866. Road Runner 760-767-5379, 1010 Palm Canyon Dr., Borrego Springs. Public/18/3/69.0/115/2894. The Springs at Borrego 760-767-0004, 2255 DiGiorgio Rd., Borrego Springs. Public/9 /36/69.3/111/2900. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 67 desertgolfandtennis.com PrivateGolfclubscoachellavalley CLUB #HOLES Andalusia CC 18 Avondale 18 Bermuda Dunes 27 Bighorn** 36 Chaparral 18 The Citrus Club 54 Club at Shenandoah Sprs.27 Desert Horizons 18 Desert Island** 18 Eldorado 18 The Hideaway 36 Indian Canyons 18 Indian Ridge 36 Indian Wells 36 Ironwood CC 36 La Quinta CC 18 Madison Club 18 Marrakesh 18 Mission Hills 54 Monterey 27 Morningside 18 Mountain View 18 Palm Valley 36 PGA WEST 108 Plantation 18 Rancho La Quinta 36 Rancho Las Palmas 27 Santa Rosa 18 Shadow Mountain 18 Stone Eagle GC 19 Sunrise 18 Tamarisk 18 Thunderbird 18 The Lakes CC 27 The Palms 18 The Quarry 18 The Reserve 18 The Springs Club 18 The Tradition 18 Toscana CC 36 The Vintage Club 36 TYPE INITIATION FEE MONTHLY DUES Non Equity Equity Equity Non Non Property Equity Equity Equity Equity Non Equity Equity Equity Equity Equity Executive Non Annual Equity Equity Non Non Equity Non Annual Equity Equity Non Executive Non Equity Equity Equity E/Transfer Equity Equity Equity Equity Equity Equity $35,000 $5,000 $10,000 $350,000 $7,500 $30,000 $0 $30,000 $10,000 $150,000 $150,000 $6,900 $69,500 $25,000 $29,500 $50,000 $200,000 $12,500 $65,000 $0 $60,000 $75,000 $10,000 $45,000 $17,500 $105,000 $7,650 $1,000 $1,000 $15,750 $3430 $30,000 $50,000 $10,000 $20,000 $60,000 $250,000 $25,000 $60,000 $150,000 $250,000 $1080 $790 $848 $2,417 $133 $964 $182 $1,225 $865 $1750 $1,950 $575 $1272 $974 $1,130 $964 $2,917 $200 $920 $555 $1,700 $928 $658 $1070 $770 $1,225 $0 $305 $450 $0 $199 $1,220 $1,763 $1065 $685 $1,600 $2,334 $1145 $1,950 $1,650 $2,666 TRAIL FEE FOOD MIN. $550 $0 $550 $1,100/A $475 $900 $1000 $0 $350 $675 $75 $0 $0 $0 $550 $0 $595 $850 $500 $0 $0 $0 $650 $0 $825 $1,000/A $525 $0 $860 $800 $650 $1,000 $0 $0 $350 $750 $790 $0 $650 $0 $625 $1,000/A $750 $0 $600 $0 $900/A $0 $0 $0 $700 $0 $420 $0 $0 $0 $500 $0 $0 $0 $400 $600 $850 $0 $450 $0 $550 $1,000 $0 $0 $0 $0 $650 $0 $475 $1000/A $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 CAP OF MEMBERS FACILITIES 695 300 498 550 625 700 375 250 280 425 580 350 575 750 685 325 225 364 1095 770 250 325 500 1750 435 695 0 350 375 300 350 525 325 902 430 300 260 350 290 550 505 GTSF GTF G GTFSSp GTS GTFSSp GST GTF GT GTFSSp GTFSp GF GTFSSp GF GTFSp GFSp G GTFS GTFSSp GTF GTF GTFSSp GTFSSp GTFSp G GTFS GTFSSp G GT G GTFS GT GTFS GTFSSp G GTFS GTFSSp GTFSp GF GTFSp GTFSSp PHONE (760) 777-1014 (760) 345-2727 (760) 345-2771 (760) 341-4653 (760) 340-1893 (760) 564-7643 (760) 343-3497 (760) 340-4646 (760) 328-2111 (760) 346-8081 (760) 777-7400 (760) 833-8700 (760) 772-7281 (760) 834-6023 (760) 766-1095 (760) 564-4151 (760) 391-4500 (760) 568-2688 (760) 324-9400 (760) 346-1115 (760) 324-1234 (760) 771-4311 (760) 345-2737 (760) 564-7111 (760) 775-3688 (760) 777-7748 (760) 862-4578 (760) 568-5707 (760) 346-8242 (760) 773-6150 (760) 328-6549 (760) 328-2141 (760) 328-2161 (760) 568-4321 (760) 771-2606 (760) 777-1100 (760) 674-2239 (760) 324-4562 (760) 564-8723 (760) 404-1444 (760) 862-2805 Note: All of the clubs indicated different priced memberships (individual, family, corporate, etc.) therefore, prices reflect information on family memberships if possible. The double asterisk indicates dual memberships. Facilities range from golf (G), tennis (T), swimming (S), fitness (F), and spa (Sp). Spa includes salon and massage therapy. Under Type of club, property represents land/membership only. Under Trail fee, club represents only club carts allowed 68 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 desertgolfandtennis.com ArizonaGolfclubs Arizona Alpine Country Club 928-339-4944, 100 Country Club Lane, Alpine. Public/18/65/109/5628. Arroyo Dunes GC 928-726-8350, W. 32nd Street, Yuma. Public/18/54/2147. Antelope Hills Golf Course 928-776-7888, 19 Clubhouse Drive, Prescott. North: Public/18/70.1/122/6380. South: Public/18/67.5/109/6119. Aspen Valley Golf Club 928-527-4653, 1855 Continental Dr., Flagstaff. Private/18/72/130/6828. Apache Stronghold Golf Club 928-475-7800, Box 1012, Hwy 70, San Carlos. Resort/18/72.1/138/6982. Arizona City Golf Club 520-466-5327, 13939 Cleator, Arizona City. Public/18/72/6,775/117. (See Map #4) Beaver Creek Golf Resort 928-567-4487, 4250 N. Montezuma Ave., Lake Montezuma. Public/18/71/6,486/120. Butterfield Golf Course 928-785-4834, 10231 Dome St., Wellton. Public/18/54/2,748/NR. 1. Alpine Country Club 2. Antelope Hills Golf Course 3. Apache Stronghold Golf Club 4. Arizona City Golf Club 5. Arroyo Dunes GC 6. Aspen Valley Golf Club 7. Beaver Creek Golf Resort 8. Butterfield Golf Course 10. Casa Grande Golf Course 11. Cerbat Cliffs Golf Course 12. Cocopah Bend Golf Resort 13. Concho Valley Country Club 14. Continental Country Club 15. Desert Hills Golf Course 16. Desert Lakes Golf Course 17. Dove Valley Golf Club 18. Duke at Rancho El Dorado 19. El Rio Country Club 20. Elephant Rocks Golf Course 21. Emerald Canyon Golf Course 22. Flagstaff Ranch Golf Club 23. Foothills Golf Course 24. Forest Highlands Golf Club 25. Fortuna Del Ray Golf Club 26. Francisco Grande Golf Club 27. Grande Valley Golf Club 28. Golf Club at Chaparrel Pines 29. Greenlee Country Club 30. Hassayampa Golf Club 31. Havasu Island Golf Course 32. Hayden Golf Course 33. Hidden Cove Golf Course 34. Ho-Ho-Kam Golf Course 35. Kearny Golf Club 36. Kino Springs Country Club 37. Lake Powell National Golf Course 38. Laughlin Ranch Golf Club 39. London Bridge Golf Club 40. Los Cabelleros Golf Club 41. Mesa del Sol Golf Course 42. Mt. Graham Country Club 43. Oakcreek Country Club 44. Palo Duro Creek Golf Course 45. Payson Golf Club 46. Pine Canyon Club 47. Pine Meadows Counrty Club 48. Pine Shadows Golf Club 49. Pinetop Country Club 50. Pinetop Lakes Country Club 51. Pinewood Country Club 53. Prescott Country Club 54. Prescott Lakes Golf Club 55. Pueblo del Sol Golf Club 56. Quailwood Greens Golf Course 57. The Refuge 58. The Rim Golf Club 59. Salome Heights Golf Course 60. San Pedro Golf Course 61. Sedona Golf Resort 62. Seven Canyons, The Club at 63. Shadow Mountain Golf Club 64. Show Low Country Club 65. Silver Creek Golf Club 66. Snowflake Golf Course 67. StoneRidge Golf Course 68. Sundance Golf Club 69. Talking Rock Golf Course 70. Torreon Golf Club 71. Turquoise Hills Golf Course 72. Turquoise Valley Golf Club 75. Valle Vista Country Club 76. Verde Santa Fe Golf Club 74. White Mountain Country Club 78. Yuma Golf and Country Club DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 69 desertgolfandtennis.com ArizonaGolfclubs Arizona Francisco Grande Golf Club 800-237-4238, 26000 Gila Bend Hwy, Casa Grande. Resort/18/72/7,600/NR. Palo Duro Creek Golf Course 520-377-2708, 2690 North Country Dr., Nogales. Private/18/72/6923. Grande Valley Golf Club 520-466-7734, Toltec Rd., Eloy. Public/18/72/7200. Payson Golf Club 928-474-2273, 1504 W. Country Club Dr., Payson.Public/18/66/111/5756. Golf Club at Chaparrel Pines 928-472-1430, 504 N. Club Dr., Payson. Private/18/70.7/132/6458. Pine Canyon Club 928-779-5800, 3000 S. Clubhouse Circle., Flagstaff. Private/18/70.7/130/6707. Greenlee Country Club 928-687-1099, Highway 75, Duncan. Private/18/68.1/110/6296. Pine Meadows Counrty Club 928-535-4220, 2209 Country Club Dr., Overgaard. Public/18/63.7/111/5192. Hassayampa Golf Club 928-443-1958, 2060 Golf Club Lane, Prescott. Private/18/71.2/134/6634. Pine Shadows Golf Club 928-634-1093, 1480 W. Groseta Ranch Blvd., Cottonwood. Public/18/63.1/107/4446. Havasu Island Golf Course 928-855-5585, 1090 McCulloch Blvd., Lake Havasu City. Public/18/60.1/96/4196. Pinetop Country Club 928-369-2461, 6739 Country Club Dr., Pinetop. Private/18/68.7/119/6458. Hayden Golf Course 928-356-7801, Golf Course Rd. Box 298, Hayden. Public/18/66.1/108/5575. Pinetop Lakes Country Club 928-369-4531, 4643 Bucksprings Rd., Pinetop. Public/18/61.5/103/4645. Hidden Cove Golf Course 928-524-3097, Box 70 Hidden Cove Rd., Holbrook. Public/18/70.2/123/6538. Pinewood Country Club 928-286-1110, 395 E. Pinewood Blvd., Munds Park. Private/18/67.3/111/6148. Ho-Ho-Kam Golf Course 520-723-7192, Highway 278, Coolidge. Public/18/72. Prescott Country Club 928-772-8984, 1030 Prescott Country Club Blvd, Dewey. Semi-Private/18/70.7/126/6675. Kearny Golf Club 928-363-7441, Box 927, 301Airport Rd., Kearny. Public/18/70/113/6549. Prescott Lakes Golf Club 928-443-3500, 315 E. Smoke Tree Lane, Prescott. Private/18/72/132/7102. Kino Springs Country Club 520-287-8701, 187 Kino Springs Dr., Nogales. Public/18/72/6,445/126. Pueblo del Sol Golf Club 520-378-6444, 2770 St. Andrews Dr., Sierra Vista. Private/18/72/6,880/128. Lake Powell National Golf Course 928-645-2023, 400 Clubhouse Dr., Page. Public/18/71.3/136/6411. Quailwood Greens Golf Course 928-772-0130, 11750 E. Hwy 69, Dewey. Semi-Private/18/65.4/110/5481. Laughlin Ranch Golf Club 928-754-1243, 1360 William Hardy, Bullhead City. Public/18/72/7192. The Refuge 928-764-2275, 3275 Latrobe Dr., Lake Havasu City. Semi-Private/18/72.5/129/6844. London Bridge Golf Club 928-855-2719, 2400 Clubhouse Dr., Lake Havasu City. Semi-Private/18/69.3/123/6176. The Rim Golf Club 928-472-1480, 301 S. Clubhouse Rd, Payson. Private/18/72.9/140/7040. Los Cabelleros Golf Club 928-684-2704, 1551 S. Vulture Mine Rd., Wickenburg. Resort/18/72. Salome Heights Golf Course 928-859-4653, 58600 Monroe Ave., Salome. Private/18/66.2/101/5974. Mesa del Sol Golf Course 928-342-1283, 12213 Calle del Cid, Yuma. Public/18/71.8/124/6767. San Pedro Golf Course 520-586-7888, 926 N. Madison St., Benson. Public/18/72/7313. Forest Highlands Golf Club 928-525-9000, 657 Forest Highlands Dr., Flagstaff. Canyon Course: Private/18/71/7007. Meadows Course: Private/18/72/7272. Mt. Graham Country Club 928-348-3140, PO Box 592, Safford. Public/18/69.4/113/6493. Sedona Golf Resort 928-284-9355, 35 Ridge Trail Dr., Sedona. Resort/18/70.6/128/6540. Fortuna Del Ray Golf Club 928-342-4766, 13650 N. Frontage Rd, Yuma. Public/18/69.6/108/6580. Oakcreek Country Club 928-284-1660, 690 Bell Rock Blvd, Sedona. Semi-Private/18/69.8/125/6353. Seven Canyons, The Club at 928-203-2001, 3755 Long Canyon Rd., Sedona. Private/18/71.3/136/6490. continued from previous page Casa Grande Golf Course 520-836-9216, 2121 N. Thornton, Casa Grande. Public/18/72/6,316/NR. (See Map #10) Cerbat Cliffs Golf Course 928-753-6593, 1001 Gates Ave., Kingman. Public/18/71/129/6560. Cocopah Bend Golf Resort 928-343-1663, 6800 Strand Ave., Yuma. Private/18/66.1/103/5508. Concho Valley Country Club 928-337-4644, HC 30, Box 900, Concho. Public/18/70.2/124/6665. Continental Country Club 928-527-7997, Oakmount Dr., Flagstaff. Public/18/67.5/118/5991. Desert Hills Golf Course 928-344-4653, 1245 Desert Hills Dr., Yuma. Public/18/71.8/119/6767. Desert Lakes Golf Course 928-768-1000, 5835 Desert Lakes Drive, Bullhead City. Public/18/69.5/115/6315. Dove Valley Golf Club 928-627-3262, 220 N. Marshall Loop Rd., Somerton. Private/18/65.1/108/5293. Duke at Rancho El Dorado 520-568-4300, Rancho El Dorado Pkwy., Maricopa.Public/18/72/7011. El Rio Country Club 928-788-3150, 1 Paseo El Rio, Mohave Valley Public/18/70.6/117/6490. Elephant Rocks Golf Course 928-635-4935, 2200 Country Club Drive, Williams. Public/18/67.7/125/6686. Emerald Canyon Golf Course 928-667-3366, 72 Emerald Canyon Dr., Parker. Public/18//71.1/130/6552. Flagstaff Ranch Golf Club 928-214-0677, 3600 Flagstaff Ranch Rd., Flagstaff. Private/18/71.9/133/6931. Foothills Golf Course 928-342-9565, 14000 E. Foothills, Yuma. Public/18/64/99/5088. 70 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 desertgolfandtennis.com ArizonaGolfclubs Arizona continued from previous page Shadow Mountain Golf Club 520-826-3412, 1105 Irene St., Pearce. Public/18/72/6,632/126. Show Low Country Club 928-537-4564, 860 N. 36th Drive, Show Low. Public/18/70/5,914/114. Silver Creek Golf Club 928-537-2744, 2051 Silver Lake Blvd., White Mountain Lake. Public/18/71.7/135/6813. Snowflake Golf Course 928-536-7233, 90 N. Country Club Dr., Snowflake. Public/18/68.7/116/6375. StoneRidge Golf Course 928-772-6500, 1601 N. Bluff Top Rd., Prescott Valley. Public/18/71.2/132/6785. Sundance Golf Club 623-328-0400, 900 S. Sundance, Buckeye. Public/18/72. Talking Rock Golf Course 928-858-7000, 15075 N. Talking Rock Ranch Rd., Prescott. Private/18/70/124/6616. Torreon Golf Club 929-532-8000, 651 S. Torreon Loop, Show Low. Private/18/68.8/125/6138. Turquoise Hills Golf Course 520-586-2585, 800 E. Country Club Dr., Benson. Public/18/56/83/3004. Turquoise Valley Golf Club 520-432-3025, 1791 Newell Rd., Naco. Public/18/71.5/129/6778. Valle Vista Country Club 928-757-8744, 9686 Concho Dr., Kingman. Private/18/69.1/120/6266. Verde Santa Fe Golf Club 928-634-5454, 1045 S. Verde Santa Fe, Cottonwood. Public/18/68.7/115/6061. White Mountain Country Club 928-367-4913, PO Box 1489, Pinetop. Private/18/72/7313. Yuma Golf and Country Club 928-726-1104, 3150 Fortuna Ave., Yuma. Private/18/70.5/122/6416. The Refuge The publisher and staff of Desert Golf & Tennis make every effort to ensure accuracy in our maps and directories. Should you find any errors please email us with the corrections. Our desire is for our maps and directories to remain as current as possible; with your assistance we will achieve the highest level of accuracy. We value your input. maps@desertgolf&tennis.com DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 71 desertgolfandtennis.com PhoenixArizona Phoenix Arizona 1. Adobe Dam Family Golf Course 2. Aguila Golf Club 3. Ahwatukee Country Club 4. Ahwatukee Lake Golf Course 5. Alta Mesa Golf Club 6. Ancala Country Club 7. Anthem Golf & Country Club 8. Apache Creek Golf Club 9. Apache Sun Golf Course 10. Apache Wells Country Club 11. Arizona Biltmore Golf Club 12. Arizona Country Club 13. Arizona Golf Resort 14. Arizona Traditions Golf Club 15. Arrowhead Country Club 16. ASU Karsten Golf Center 17. Augusta Ranch Golf Course 18. Bear Creek Golf Club 19. Bellair Golf Club 20. Bougainvillea Golf Club 21. The Boulders Golf Club 22. Briarwood Country Club 23. Camelback Golf Club 24. Cave Creek Golf Course 25. Cimarron Golf Club 26. Club West Golf Club 27. Coldwater Golf Club 28. Continental Golf Club 72 29. Coronado Golf Club 30. Corte Belle Golf Club 31. Cottonwood Country Club 32. The Country Club of DC Ranch 33. Country Meadows Golf Club 34. Coyote Lakes Golf Club 35. Cypress Golf Club 36. Deer Valley Golf Course 37. Desert Canyon Golf Club 38. Desert Forest Golf Club 39. Desert Highlands Golf Club 40. Desert Mirage Golf Club 41. Desert Mountain 42. Desert Sands Golf Club 43. Desert Springs Golf Club 44. Desert Trails Golf Course 45. Dobson Ranch Golf Course 46. Dove Valley Ranch Golf Club 47. Duke at Rancho El Dorado 48. Eagle Mountain Golf Club 49. Eagles Nest Golf Course 50. Echo Mesa Golf Club 51. El Caro Country Club 52. Encanto Golf Course 53. The Estancia Club 54. Estrella Mountain Golf Club 55. Estrella Mountain Ranch Golf Club 56. Falcon Golf Course 57. Firerock Country Club 58. Foothills Golf Club 59. Fountain of the Sun Country Club DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 60. Gainey Ranch Golf Club 61. Glen Lakes Golf Club 62. Golf Club Scottsdale 63. Gold Canyon Golf Resort 64. Grandview Golf Course 65. Granite Falls Golf Course 66. Grayhawk Golf Club 67. Great Eagle Golf Course 68. Greenfield Lakes Golf Course 69. Hillcrest Golf Club 70. Johnson Ranch, The Golf Club at 71. Ken McDonald Golf Course 72. Kierland Golf Club 73. Kokopelli Golf Resort 74. Las Colinas Golf Course 75. Las Sendas Golf Club 76. Leisure World Country Club 77. Legacy Golf Resort 78. Legend at Arrowhead 79. Legend Trail Golf Club 80. Links Golf Course at Queen Creek, 81. Lone Tree Golf Club 82. Longbow Golf Club 83. Maryvale Golf Club 84. McCormick Ranch Golf Club 85. Mission Royale Golf Course 86. Moon Valley Country Club 87. Mountain Brook Golf Club 88. Mountain Shadows Golf Club 89. Oasis Golf Club 90. Ocotillo Golf Club 91. Orange Tree Golf Resort 92. Painted Mountain Golf Club 93. Palmbrook Country Club 94. Palm Valley Golf Club 95. Palo Verde Country Club 96. Palo Verde Golf Course 97. Papago Golf Course 98. Paradise Valley Country Club 99. Paradise Valley Park Golf Course 100. Pavillion Lakes Golf Club 101. Pebblebrook Golf Club 102. Pepperwood Golf Course 103. Phantom Horse Golf Club 104. Phoenix Country Club 105. The Phoenician Golf Club 106. Pinnacle Peak Country Club 107. The Pointe GC at Lookout Mtn 108. Pueblo El Mirage Country Club 109. Quail Run Golf Club 110. Queen Valley Golf Club 111. Quintero Golf and Country Club 112. Rancho Manana Country Club 114. The Raven Golf Club at South Mtn 115. Raven Golf Club at Verrado 116. Red Mountain Ranch Country Club, 117. Rio Salado Golf Course 118. Rio Verde Country Club 119. Riverview Golf Course 120. Rolling Hills Golf Club 121. Sanctuary Golf Club 122. San Marcos Resort & CC desertgolfandtennis.com Golfclubs 123. Scottsdale Silverado Golf Course 124. Seville Golf & Country Club 125. Shalimar Country Club 126. Silverleaf Golf Course 127. Springfield Golf Range 128. Southern Dunes Golf Club 129. Stardust Golf Club 130. Starfire at Scottsdale Country Club 131. Stonecreek, The Golf Club 136. Sunbird Golf Resort 132. Sun City Country Club 133. Sun City Lakes Golf Club 134. Sun City North Golf Club 135. Sun City Riverview Golf Club 137. Sun City South Golf Club 138. Sun Lakes Country Club 139. Sunland Village East Golf Course 140. Sunland Village Golf Course 141. SunRidge Canyon Golf Club 142. Superstition Mountain Golf Club 143. Superstition Springs Golf Club 144. Talking Stick Golf Course 145. Tatum Ranch Golf Course 146. Terravita Golf and Country Club 147. The 500 Club 148. Toka Sticks Golf Club 149. Tonto Verde Golf Club 150. TPC of Scottsdale 151. Trail Ridge Golf Club 153. Trilogy Golf Club at Power Ranch 152. Trilogy Golf Club at Vistancia 154. Troon Golf Country Club 155. Troon North Golf Club 156. Tuscany Falls Country Club 157. Union Hills Country Club 158. Viewpoint Golf Resort 159. Villa De Paz Golf Course 160. Villa Monterey Golf Course 161. Vistal Golf Club 162. We-Ko-Pa Golf Club 163. Westbrook Village Vistas Golf Course 164. Westbrook Village Lakes Golf Club 165. Western Skies Golf Club 166. Whirlwind Golf Club 167. Whisper Rock Golf Club 168. Wildfire Golf Club 169. Wigwam Golf Resort 170. Willowbrook & Willowcreek GC 171. Mesa Country Club 172. Mirabel Golf Course 173. Blackstone Country Club 174. Encanterra, A Trilogy Country Club Adobe Dam Family Golf Course 623-581-2800, 3847 W. Pinnacle Peak Rd., Glendale. Public/18/57.9/86/3512. Aguila Golf Club 602-237-9601, 8440 S. 35th Ave., Laveen. Public/18/72.4/129/6962. Ahwatukee Country Club 480-893-1161, 12432 S. 48th St., Phoenix. Semi-Private/18/72/126/6713. Ahwatukee Lake Golf Course 480-893-3004, 13431 S. 44th St., Phoenix. Public/18/60/4,019/NR. Alta Mesa Golf Club 480-827-9411, 1460 N. Alta Mesa Drive, Mesa. Private/18/72/132/7132. Ancala Country Club 480-391-2777, 11700 E. Via Linda, Scottsdale. Private/18/72/152/6841. Anthem Golf & Country Club 623-742-6211, 2708 W. Anthem Club Drive, Anthem. Private/18/72/139/7217. Blackstone Country Club 623-707-8710, 12101 Blackstone Dr., Peoria. Private/18/72/7,089/143. Apache Creek Golf Club 480-982-2677, 3401 S. Ironwood Drive, Apache Junction. Public/18/72/128/6541. Bougainvillea Golf Club 602-237-4567, 5740 W. Baseline Rd., Laveen. Public/18/71/118/6740. Apache Sun Golf Course 480-987-9065, 919 E. Pima Rd, Queen Creek. Public/18/63/99/4998. The Boulders Golf Club 480-488-9028, 34831 N. Tom Darlington Dr., Carefree. Resort/18/72/144/6717. Apache Wells Country Club 480-830-4725, 5601 E. Hermosa Vista Drive, Mesa. Semi-Private/18/71/114/6038. Briarwood Country Club 623-584-5301, 20800 N. 135th Ave., Sun City West. Private/18/72/128/6576. Arizona Biltmore Golf Club 602-955-9655, 2400 E. Missouri Ave., Phoenix. Adobe: Resort/18/68.7/119/6000. Links: Resort/18/67/117/5540. Camelback Golf Club 480-596-7050, 7847 N. Mockingbird Lane, Scottsdale. Indian Bend Course: Resort/18/72/122/7014 Padres Course: Resort/18/72/131/6903. Arizona Country Club 480-946-4565, 5668 E. Orange Blossom Lane, Phoenix. Private/18/72/127/6714. Arizona Golf Resort 480-832-1661, 425 S. Power Road, Mesa. Resort/18/71.3/121/6570. Arizona Traditions Golf Club 623-584-4000, 17225 N. Citrus, Surprise. Public/18/70/110/6110. Arrowhead Country Club 623-561-9625, 19888 N. 73rd Ave., Glendale. Private/18/72//128/7001. ASU Karsten Golf Center 800-727-8331 (Par-Tee1), 1125 E. Rio Salado Pkwy, Tempe. Public/18/72/125/6272. Arizona Country Club 480-946-4565, 5668 E. Orange Blossom Lane, Phoenix. Private/18/72/127/6714. Arizona Golf Resort 480-832-1661, 425 S. Power Road, Mesa. Resort/18/71.3/121/6570. Arizona Traditions Golf Club 623-584-4000, 17225 N. Citrus, Surprise. Public/18/70/110/6110. Arrowhead Country Club 623-561-9625, 19888 N. 73rd Ave., Glendale. Private/18/72//128/7001. ASU Karsten Golf Center desertgolfer.com, 1125 E. Rio Salado Pkwy, Tempe. Public/18/72/125/6272. Augusta Ranch Golf Course 480-354-1234, 2401 S. Lansing, Mesa. Public/18/61/88/3657. Bear Creek Golf Club 480-883-8200, 500 E. Riggs Rd., Chandler. Public/18/69.8/116/6320. Cave Creek Golf Course 602-866-8076, 15202 N. 19th Ave., Phoenix. Public/18/72/122/6876. Cimarron Golf Club 623-975-5654, 17100 W. Clearview, Surprise. Semi-Private/18/69.2/121/6310. Club West Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 16400 S. 14th Ave. Public/18/70/123/6512. Coldwater Golf Club 623-932-9000, 100 N. Clubhouse Dr., Avondale. Public/18/72/121/6758. Continental Golf Club 480-941-1585, 7920 E. Osborn Rd., Scottsdale. Public/18/58.4/85/4141. Coronado Golf Club 480-947-8364, 2829 N. Miller Rd., Scottsdale. Public/18/58.3/90/3700. Corte Belle Golf Club 623-556-8951, 22131 N. Mission Drive, Sun City West. Private/18/72/123/7011. Cottonwood Country Club 480-895-9449, 25630 Brentwood Dr., Sun Lakes. Private/18/72/129/6737. The Country Club of DC Ranch 480-342-7200, 9290 E. Thompson Peak Pkwy, Scottsdale. Private/18/72/130/6872. Country Meadows Golf Club 623-972-1364, 8411 N. 107th Ave., Peoria. Public/18/63/88/4400. Coyote Lakes Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 18800 N. Coyote Lakes Pkwy, Surprise. Public/18/71/117/6159. Cypress Golf Club 480-946-5155, 10801 E. McDowell Rd., Scottsdale. Public/18/70.7/116/6560. Bellair Golf Club 602-978-0330, 17233 N. 45th Ave., Glendale. Public/18/59/90/3493. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 73 desertgolfandtennis.com PhoenixArizona Phoenix Arizona continued from previous page Deer Valley Golf Course 623-214-1100, 13975 W. Deer Valley Dr., Sun City. Private/18/72/120/6547. Desert Canyon Golf Club 480-837-1173, 10440 Indian Wells Dr., Fountain Hills. Public/18/71/123/6415. Desert Forest Golf Club 480-488-4589, 37207 N. Mule Train Dr., Carefree. Private/18/72/139/6472. Desert Highlands Golf Club 480-585-8521, 10040 E. Happy Valley Rd., Scottsdale. Private/18/72/135/5807. Desert Mirage Golf Club 623-772-0110, 8710 W. Maryland, Glendale. Public/18/58.6/89/4198. Desert Mountain 480-595-4090, 11124 E. Prospect Point Dr., Scottsdale. Apache Course: Private/18/72/131/6793. 480-488-1362, 10333 Rockaway Hills, Scottsdale. Chiricahau Course: Private/18/72.480-488-1791, 38580 N. Desert Mnt Pkwy, Scottsdale. Cochise Course: Private/18/68/129/7019 480-488-1363, 10333 Rockaway Hills, Scottsdale. Geronimo Course: Private/18/68/132/7420. 480-488-1363, 10333 Rockaway Hills, Scottsdale. Outlaw Course: Private/18/68/132/7107. 480-595-4870, 41045 N Cave Creek Rd. Renegade Course: Private/18/73/138/7515. Desert Sands Golf Club 480-832-0210, 1922 S. 74th St., Mesa. Public/18/67/89/4029. Desert Springs Golf Club 623-546-7400, 19900 N. Remington Dr., Surprise. Semi-Private/18/72/120/6306. Desert Trails Golf Course 623-544-6017, 20218 Skylark Drive, Sun City West. Private/18/61/91/4027. Dobson Ranch Golf Course 480-644-2291, 2155 S. Dobson Rd., Mesa. Public/18/72/117/6593. Dove Valley Ranch Golf Club 480-488-0009, 33244 N. Black Mountain Pkwy, Phoenix. Public/18/72/131/7011. Eagles Nest Golf Course 623-935-6750, 3645 Clubhouse Drive, Goodyear. Semi-Private/18/72/127/6860. Granite Falls Golf Course 623-546-7575, 15949 W. Clearview Blvd, Surprise. Semi-Private/18/72/127/6839. Echo Mesa Golf Club 623-544-6014, 20349 Echo Mesa Dr., Sun City West. Private/18/60.3/95/4145. Grayhawk Golf Club 800-727-8331 (Par-Tee1), 8620 E.Thompson Peak Pkwy, Scottsdale. Talon: Public /18/72/136/6985. Raptor: Public /18/71/133/7135. El Caro Country Club 602-995-2117, 2222 W. Royal Palms Rd., Phoenix. Public/18/60/78/3330. Encanto Golf Course 602-253-3963, 2705 N. 15th Ave., Phoenix. Public/18/70/111/6386. Encanterra, A Trilogy Country Club 480-348-6087,1035 East Combs Rd, Queen Creek. Private/18/72/118. The Estancia Club 480-473-4415, 27998 N. 99th Place, Scottsdale. Private/18/72/7146/135. Estrella Mountain Golf Club 623-932-3714, 15205 W. Vineyard Ave., Goodyear. Public/18/69/116/6393. Estrella Mountain Ranch Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 11800 S. Golf Club Drive, Goodyear. Public/18/72/138/7102. Falcon Golf Course 623-935-7800, 15152 W. Camelback Rd., Litchfield Park. Public/18/71/128/6673. Firerock Country Club 480-836-8000, 15925 E. Shea Blvd., Fountain Hills. Private/18/72/6984/NR. Foothills Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 2201 E. Clubhouse Dr., Phonenix. Public/18/70.3/124/6406. Fountain of the Sun Country Club 480-986-3158, 500 S. 80th St., Mesa. Private/18/62/4224/93. Gainey Ranch Golf Club 480-483-2582, 7600 Gainey Club Dr., Scottsdale. Arroyo/Lakes: Resort/18/69.1/124/6187 Dunes: Resort/18/68.4/121/6013. Glen Lakes Golf Club 623-939-754, 15450 W. Northern, Glendale. Public/18/61.4/99/4596. Golf Club Scottsdale 480-443-8868, 28445 N. 122nd St., Scottsdale. Private/18/72.4/138/6970. Duke at Rancho El Dorado 480-883-6314, 42660 W. Rancho El Dorado Pkwy, Maricopa. Public/18/69.9/117/6536. Gold Canyon Golf Resort 800-624-6445, 6100 S. Kings Ranch Rd., Gold Canyon. Resort, Sidewinder: Resort/18/71/132/71.3 Dinosaur Mountain: Resort/18/70/143/71.3. Eagle Mountain Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 14915 E. Eagle Mountain Pkwy, Fountain Hills. Public/18/71/139/6755. Grandview Golf Course 623-544-6013, 14260 Meeker Blvd., Sun City West. Private/18/72/126/6846. 74 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Great Eagle Golf Course 623-584-6000, 17200 W. Bell Rd, Surprise. Public/18/72/124/6646. Greenfield Lakes Golf Course 480-503-0500, 2484 E. Warner Road, Gilbert. Public/18/62/91/4107. Hillcrest Golf Club 623-584-1500, 20002 Star Ridge Dr., Sun City West. Public/18/NR/6269. Johnson Ranch, The Golf Club at 480-987-9800, 433 E. Golf Club Dr., Queen Creek. Public/18/72/137/7141. Ken McDonald Golf Course 480-350-5250, 800 E. Divot Drive, Tempe. Public/18/72/125/6743. Kierland Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 15636 Clubgate Dr., Scottsdale. Public/18/72/133/6913. Kokopelli Golf Resort desertgolfer.com, 1800 W. Guadalupe Rd., Gilbert. Public/18/72/132/6716. Las Colinas Golf Course 480-987-3633, 21515 E. Village Loop Rd., Queen Creek. Public/18/70.7/122/6494. Las Sendas Golf Club 480-396-4000, 7555 E. Eagle Crest Dr., Mesa. Private/18/70.8/135/6325. Leisure World Country Club 480-832-0003, 908 S. Power Rd., Mesa. Private/18/73/115/6434. Legacy Golf Resort desertgolfer.com, 6808 S. 32nd St., Phoenix. Public/18/69.7/123/6297. Legend at Arrowhead desertgolfer.com, 21027 N. 67the Ave., Glendale. Semi-Private/18/70.7/125/6509. Legend Trail Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 9462 E. Legendary Lane, Scottsdale. Public/18/72/6845/135. Links Golf Course at Queen Creek, 480-987-1910, 445 E. Ocotillo Rd., Queen Creek. Public/18/70/100/6061. Lone Tree Golf Club 480-219-0830, 6262 south Mtn Blbvd., Chandler. Semi-Private/18/69.6/118/6314. Longbow Golf Club 480-807-5400, 5601 E. Longbow Pkwy., Mesa. Public/18/70/128/6750. desertgolfandtennis.com Golfclubs Maryvale Golf Club 623-846-4022, 5902 W. Indian School Rd., Phoenix. Public/18/72/115/6539. Paradise Valley Park Golf Course 602-992-7190, 3503 E. Union Hills Drive, Phoenix. Public/18/61/88/4034. McCormick Ranch Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 7505 E. McCormick Pkwy., Pine Course: Resort/18/70.3/132/6371 Palm Course: Resort/18/70/130/6279. Pavillion Lakes Golf Club 480-948-3370, 8870 E. Indian Bend Rd., Scottsdale. Public/18/71/120/6515. Mesa Country Club 480-964-3514, 660 W. Fairway Dr., Mesa. Private/18/72/6595/125. Mirabel Golf Course 480-437-1520, 37401 N.Mirabel Club Dr., Scottsdale. Private/18/71/135/7127. Mission Royale Golf Course 520-876-5335, 11 South Mission Pkwy, Bldg #1, Casa Grande. Public/18/68.9/115/6142. Moon Valley Country Club 602-942-1278, 151 W. Moon Valley Dr, Phoenix. Private/18/73/127/6654. Mountain Brook Golf Club 480-671-1000, 5783 S. Mountain Brook Dr., Gold Canyon. Public/18/72/124/6615. Mountain Shadows Golf Club 602-951-5427, 5641 E. Lincoln Dr., Scottsdale. Semi-Private/18/56/87/3081. Oasis Golf Club 480-888-8890, 5764 E. Hunt Hwy, Queen Creek. Public/18/74.9/133/7362. Ocotillo Golf Resort desertgolfer.com, 3751 S. Clubhouse Dr., Chandler. Public/27/72/125/7016. Orange Tree Golf Resort 480-948-3730, 10601 N. 56th St., Scottsdale. Resort/18/72/122/6762. Painted Mountain Golf Club 480-832-0156, 6210 E. McKellips Rd., Mesa. Public/18/70/104/6026. Palmbrook Country Club 623-977-8383, 9350 W. Greenway Rd., Sun City West. Private/18/70.2/122/6529. Palm Valley Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 2211 North Litchfield Rd., Goodyear. Public/18/72/129/6509. Palo Verde Country Club 480-895-0300, 25630 Brentwood Dr., Sun City. Private/18/70.2/122/6529. Palo Verde Golf Course 602-249-9930, 6215 N. 15th Ave., Phoenix. Public/18/57.3/81/3484. Papago Golf Course 602-275-8428, 5595 E. Moreland St., Phoenix. Public/18/72/132/7068. Paradise Valley Country Club 602-840-8100, 7101 N. Tatum Blvd., Paradise Valley. Private/18/72/132/6802. Pebblebrook Golf Club 623-544-6010, N. 128th Avenue, Sun City West. Private/18/70.1/119/6460. Pepperwood Golf Course 480-831-9457, 647 W. Baseline Rd., Tempe. Public/18/59.5/97/4020. Phantom Horse Golf Club 602-431-6480, 7777 S. Pointe Pkwy, Phoenix. Resort/18/70/124/6211. Phoenix Country Club 602-263-5208, 2901 N. 7th St., Phoenix. Private/18/71/130/6700. The Phoenician Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 6000 E. Camelback Rd., Scottsdale. Resort/18/70/130/6258. Pinnacle Peak Country Club 480-585-0385, 8701 E. Pinnacle Peak Rd, Scottsdale. Private/18/72/140/6947. The Pointe GC at Lookout Mtn desertgolfer.com, 11111 N. 7th St., Phoenix Resort/18/72/131/6607. Pueblo El Mirage Country Club 623-583-0425, 11201 N. El Mirage Rd, El Mirage.Public/18/72/125/6595. Quail Run Golf Club 623-876-3035, 9774 Alabama Ave., Sun City. Private/18/59.5/90/4357. Queen Valley Golf Club 520-463-2214, 600 N. Fairway Dr., Queen Valley. Public/18/66/NR/4482. Quintero Golf and Country Club 928-501-1500, 16752 W. State Rt. 74, Peoria. Private/18/72/145/7190. Rio Verde Country Club 480-471-9420, 18731 E. Four Peaks Blvd, Rio Verde. Quail Run: Private/18/72/117/6499. White Wing: Private/18/72/117/6392. Riverview Golf Course 480-644-3515, 2202 W. 8th St., Mesa. Public/18/69/115/6128. Rolling Hills Golf Club 480-350-5275, 1415 N. Mill Ave., Tempe. Public/18/58.9/93/3828. Sanctuary Golf Club 480-502-8200, 10690 E. Sheena Drive, Scottsdale. Public/18/71/6624/NR. San Marcos Resort & CC 480-963-3358, 100 N. Dakota St., Chandler. Resort/18/72/NR/6500. Scottsdale Silverado Golf Course 480-778-0100, 7605 E. Indian Bend, Scottsdale. Public/18/68/116/6057. Seville Golf & Country Club 480-722-8100, 6683 South Clubhouse Drive, Gilbert. Private/18/71.9/125/7015. Shalimar Country Club 480-831-1244, 2032 E. Golf Ave., Tempe. Public/18/62.4/109/4752. Silverleaf Golf Course 480-342-8099, 10375 E. Horseshoe Canyon Dr., Scottsdale. Private/18/72/140/7367. Springfield Golf Range 480-895-5759, 1200 E. Saint Andrews Blvd., Chandler. Public/18/61/100/4103. Southern Dunes Golf Club 520-568-2000, 48456 W. Hwy 238, Maricopa. Public/18/72/135/7337. Stardust Golf Club 623-544-6012, 12702 Stardust Blvd., Sun City West. Private/18/60.5/96/4267. Starfire at Scottsdale Country Club 480-948-6000, 11500 N. Hayden Rd., Scottsdale. Semi-Private/18/67.6/123/6085. Rancho Manana Country Club desertgolfer.com, 5734 E. Rancho Manana Blvd, Cave Creek. Semi-Private/18/72/125/6007. Stonecreek, The Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 4435 E. Paradise Village Pkwy. Public/18/69.9/128/6299. The Raven Golf Club at South Mtn 602-243-3636, 3636 E. Baseline Rd., Phoenix. Public/18/72/130/6571. Sunbird Golf Resort 480-883-0820, 6250 S. Sunbird Blvd, Chandler. Public/18/66/96/4350. Raven Golf Club at Verrado 623-215-3443, 4242 N. Golf Drive, Buckeye. Public/18/72/132/7258. Sun City Country Club 623-933-1353, 9433 N. 107th Ave, Sun City. Semi-Private/18/72/115/6223. Red Mountain Ranch Country Club, 480-985-0285, 6425 E. Teton, Mesa. Private/18/72/144/6774. Sun City Lakes Golf Club 623-876-3023, 10433 Talisman Rd., Sun City. Semi-Private/18/69.2/119/6251. Rio Salado Golf Course 480-990-1233, 1490 E. Weber Dr., Tempe. Public/18/61.6/105/4739. Sun City North Golf Club 623-876-3010, 12650 N. 107th, Sun City. Private/18/69.5/117/6410. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 75 desertgolfandtennis.com PhoenixArizona Phoenix Arizona continued from previous page Sun City Riverview Golf Club 623-876-3025, 16401 Del Webb Blvd., Sun City. Private/18/69.6/116/6391. Sun City South Golf Club 623-876-3015, 11000 N. 103rd, Sun City. Private/18/71.2/115/6774. Sun Lakes Country Club 480-895-9274, 25425 N. Sun Lakes Blvd, Sun Lakes. Private/18/60/NR/3874. Sunland Village East Golf Course 480-986-4079, 2250 S. Buttercup, Mesa. Semi-Private/18/62/80/3579. Sunland Village Golf Course 480-832-3691, 725 S. Rochester St., Mesa. Semi-Private/18/62/80/3623. SunRidge Canyon Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 13100 N. Sunridge Dr., Fountain Hills. Public/18/71/140/6823. Superstition Mountain Golf Club 480-983-3200, 8000 E. Club Village Dr., Superstition Mountain. Private/18/72/135/6652. Superstition Springs Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 6542 E. Baseline Rd., Mesa. Public/18/72/135/7005. Trilogy Golf Club at Power Ranch 480-988-0004, 4415 E. Village Pkwy, Gilbert. Public/18/71/126/6710. Trilogy Golf Club at Vistancia 623-594-3585, 12575 W. Golf Club Drive, Peoria. Public/18/72/134/7259. Troon Golf Country Club 480-585-0540, 25000 N. Windy Walk Dr., Scottsdale. Private/18/72137/6599. Troon North Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 10320 E. Dynamite Blvd., Scottsdale. Public/18/71.5/138/6709. Tuscany Falls Country Club 623-536-2491, 16262 Cjlubhouse Dr., Goodyear. Semi-Private/18/72. Union Hills Country Club 623-977-4281, 9860 Lindgren Ave., Sun City. Private/18/72/129/6827. Viewpoint Golf Resort 480-373-5555, 650 N. Hawes Rd, Mesa. Semi-Private/18/71/116/6224. Villa De Paz Golf Course 623-877-1172, 4220 N. 103rd Ave., Phoenix. Public/18/72/114/6140. Villa Monterey Golf Course 480-990-7100, 8100 E. Camelback, Scottsdale. Public/18/56.9/89/3014. Vistal Golf Club 602-305-7755, 701 E. Thunderbird Trail, Phoenix. Public/18/72/115/6469. We-Ko-Pa Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 18200 E. Toh-Vee Circle, Fountain Hills. Cholla Course: Public/18/72/130/7225.Saguaro Course: Public/18/71//6912. Westbrook Village Vistas Golf Course 623-566-1633, 18823 N. Country Club Pkwy., Peoria. Semi-Private/18/72/121/6544. Westbrook Village Lakes Golf Club 602-566-3439, 19260 N. Westbrook Pkwy. Peoria. Semi-Private/18/72/120/6412. Western Skies Golf Club 480-545-8542, 1245 E. Warner Rd., Gilbert. Public/18/72/120/6673. Whirlwind Golf Club 480-940-1500, 5692 W. North Loop Rd., Chandler. Public/18/71.2/128/6691. Whisper Rock Golf Club 480-575-8700, 32002 N. Old Bridge Rd., Scottsdale. Private/18/72/145/7405. Wildfire Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 5225 E. Pathfinder., Phoenix Faldo Course: Resort/18/71/127/6846 Palmer Course: Resort/18/72/135/7170. Wigwam Golf Resort desertgolfer.com, 451 N. Litchfield Rd, Litchfield Park. Resort/18/69.1/122/6085. Willowbrook & Willowcreek GC, 623-876-3030, 10600 Boswell Blvd., Sun City. Private/18/72. Talking Stick Golf Course desertgolfer.com, 9998 E. Indian Bend Rd, Scottsdale. North: Public/18/72.7/123/7200. South: Public/18/NR/7200. Tatum Ranch Golf Course 480-962-4653, 29888 N. Tantum Ranch Dr., Cave Creek. Private/18/72/128/6870. Terravita Golf and Country Club 480-488-7962, 34034 North 69th Way, Scottsdale. Private/18/72/139/7186. The 500 Club 623-492-9500, 4707 W. Pinnacle Peak Rd, Phoenix. Public/18/72/121/6867. Toka Sticks Golf Club 480-988-9405, 6910 E. Williamsfield Rd., Mesa. Public/18/72/117/6605. Tonto Verde Golf Club 480-471-2710, 18401 El Circulo Drive, Rio Verde. Semi-Private/18/72/126/6342. TPC of Scottsdale 480-585-4334, 17020 N. Hayden Rd., Scottsdale. Stadium: Public/18/71/138/7216 Champions: Public18/71/140/73.7 Trail Ridge Golf Club 623-544-6015, 21021 N. 151 St., Sun City West. Private/18/71.3/127/6618. 76 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 We-Ko-Pa Golf Club The publisher and staff of Desert Golf & Tennis make every effort to ensure accuracy in our maps and directories. Should you find any errors please email us with the corrections. Our desire is for our maps and directories to remain as current as possible; with your assistance we will achieve the highest level of accuracy. We value your input. maps@desertgolf&tennis.com desertgolfandtennis.com PrivateGolfclubs-Phoenix CLUB Alta Mesa GC Ancala Anthem Golf & CC Arrowhead CC Arizona CC Aspen Valley GC Blackstone CC Briarwood CC GC at Chaparrel Pines Cottonwood CC at DC Ranch Desert Forest GC Desert Highlands Desert Mountain The Estancia Club Firerock CC Forest Highlands Golf Club Scottsdale Hassayampa GC Leisure World CC Mesa CC Mirabel GC Moon Valley CC Palo Verde Paradise Valley CC Phoenix CC Pinewood CC Pinnacle Peak CC Quintero Golf GC Red Mnt. Ranch CC The Rim GC Rio Verde GC Seville Golf and CC Silverleaf GC Sun Lakes CC Superstition Mtn. Terravita Golf Club Tonte Verde GC Torreon GC Troon CC Union Hills CC Whisper Rock GC White Mountain CC Yuma Golf & CC #HOLES TYPE 18 Equity 18 Non Equity 36 Non Equity 18 Non Transferable 18 Equity 18 Equity 18 Equity 18 Equity 18 Non Equity 18 Private 18 Equity 18 Non Equity 18 Non Equity 108 Equity 18 Equity 18 Refundable 36 Property 18 Non Equity 18 Equity 18 Non Equity 18 Equity 18 Non & Equity 18 Equity 18 Property 18 Equity 18 Equity 18 Equity 18 Equity 18 Non Equity 18 Non Equity 18 Equity 36 Non Equity 18 Non Equity 18 Non Equity 18 Non Equity 36 Non Equity 18 Non Equity 36 Property 36 Non Equity 18 Non Equity 18 Equity 36 Non Equity 18 Equity 18 Equity INITIATION FEE $10,000 $20,000 $42,000 $1,500 $25,000 Market Price $15,000 Variable $25,000 $0 Market Price $30,000 $75,000 $140,000 Market Price $40,000 $35,000 $25,000 $30,000 $2,052/A $3,500 $50,000 $27,500 $0 $66,100 $30,000 $5,000 $25,000 $20,000 $5,000 $10,000 $25,000 Market Price $125,000 $0 $25,000 $40,000 $15,000 $20,000 $55,000 $500 $130,000 $17,500 $4,500 MONTHLY DUES $470 $580 $622 $355 $756 $2080/A $690 Variable $610 $1500/A $995 $710 $1025 $1205 $1500/A $750 $585 $850 $625 $0 $502 $1150 $608 $1150/A $420 $600 $825/A $700 $425 $474 $850 $626 $507 $1,290 $900/A $685 $540 $650 $320 $950 $445 $900 $3,225/A $425 TRAIL FEE FOOD MIN. CAP OF MEMBERS FACILITIES $1600 $1300 $750 $500/A Club $0 $16 $0 $800/A $0 $0 Club $0 $0 $0 $0 Club $0 Club Club $3 $1000 Club $0 Club $0 Club $0 $1100/A $1250 $800 $0 $1200 $0 $0 Cart & $17 $1,100 $800/A Club $21 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $1000/A $0 $50 $2,000 $250 $0 $600 $0 $0 $1,000 $0 $1500 $1500/A $0 $1200/A $0 $0 $1000/A $0 $950/A $0 $800 $0 $825 $0 $0 $1500/A $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $1,200/A $400/A $0 $0 $600 325 500 800 450 550 400 500 400 400 0 400 250 575 2375 325 395 871 350 390 NA 475 300 450 1100 475 600 350 325 400 450 295 775 456 350 0 750 345 450 780 325 390 580 450 450 G GTSF GTSFSp GTSFSp GTSFSp G GTSFSp GTS GTSF GTSF GTSF G GTSFSp GTSFSp GTSFSp GTSF GTSF G GTSFSp GTSFSp GSTF GTSFSp GTSFSp GTSF GTSF GTSFSp GTSF GTSF G GTSF GTSFSp GTSF GTSFS GFSp GSTF GTSF GTSFSp GSF GTSF GTSF GTSF G GT GTS PHONE (480) 832-3257 (480) 391-1000 (623) 742-6202 (623) 561-9600 (480) 889-1504 (928) 527-4653 (623) 707-8710 (623) 584-5600 (928) 472-1430 (480) 895-9449 (480) 342-7200 (480) 488-4589 (480) 585-7444 (480) 595-4000 (480) 473-4400 (480) 836-3435 (928) 525-9014 (480) 443-8868 (928) 445-0009 (480) 634-4370 (480) 964-3514 (480) 437-1500 (602) 942-0000 (480) 895-0300 (602) 840-8100 (602) 263-5208 (928) 286-1100 (480) 585-6992 (928) 501-1500 (480) 981-6501 (928) 472-1470 (480) 471-7010 (480) 722-8100 (480) 515-3200 (480) 895-9274 (480) 983-3200 (480) 488-7962 (480) 471-2710 (877) 771-6771 (480) 473-5093 (623) 974-5888 (480) 575-8700 (928) 367-4357 (928) 726-4210 Note: All of the clubs indicated different priced memberships (individual, family, corporate, etc.) therefore, prices reflect information on family memberships if possible. The double asterisk indicates dual memberships. Facilities range from golf (G), tennis (T), swimming (S), fitness (F), and spa (Sp). Spa includes salon and massage therapy. Under Type of club, property represents land/membership only. Under Trail fee, club represents only club carts allowed DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 77 desertgolfandtennis.com tucsonArizona Tucson Arizona 1. 49er Golf Club 2. Arizonia National Golf Course 3. Canoa Hills Golf Course 4. Canoa Ranch Golf Course 5. Country Club of Green Valley 6. Crooked Tree Golf Course 7. Del Lago Golf Club 8. Desert Hills Golf Club 9. Dorado Golf Course 10. El Conquistador Country Club 11. Fred Enke Golf Course 12. The Gallery Golf Club 13. Haven Golf Course 14. Heritage Highlands Golf Club 15. La Paloma Golf & Country Club 16. Oro Valley Country Club 17. The Pines Golf Club at Marana 18. Preserve Golf Club 19. Quail Creek Country Club 20. Randolph North Golf Course 21. Rio Rico Resort & Country Club 22. Rolling Hills Golf Club 23. SaddleBrooke Country Club 24. San Ignacio Golf Club 25. Santa Rita Country Club 26. Silverbell Golf Course 27. Skyline Country Club 28. Starr Pass Golf Course 29. Stone Canyon Country Club 30. The Views Golf Club at Oro Valley 31. Torres Blancas Golf Course 32. Trini Alvarez El Rio Golf Course 33. Tubac Golf Resort 34. Tucson Country Club 35. Tucson National, The Club 36. Ventana Canyon, The Lodge at 37. Vistoso, The Golf Club at Heritage Highlands Golf Club 520-597-7000, 4949 W. Heritage Club Blvd, Marana. Semi-Private/18/72/6,904/134. La Paloma Golf & Country Club 520-299-1500, 3660 E. Sunrise Blvd., Tucson. Canyon/Hill: Resort/18/72/70.8/140/6307 Ridge/Canyon: Resort/18/72/71.7/143/6487. Ridge/Hill: Resort/18/72/69.7/142/6296. 49er Golf Club 520-749-4001, 12000 E. Tanque Verde Rd., Tucson. Semi-Private/18/72/6,681/116. Desert Hills Golf Club 520-625-5090, 2500 S. Circulo de Las Lomas, Green Valley. Private/18/72/69.2/125/6182. Arizonia National Golf Course 520-749-3519, 9777 E. Sabino Green Dr. Semi-Private/18/72. Dorado Golf Course 520-885-6751, 1200 N. Dorado Club Dr., Tucson. Public/18/72/59.3/92/4120. Canoa Hills Golf Course 520-648-1881, 1401 Calle Urbano, Green Valley Semi-Private/18/72/6,610/130. El Conquistador Country Club 520-544-1800, 10555 N. La Canada Dr., Tucson. Canada: Semi-Private/18/72/69.8/126/6185, Conquistador: Semi-Private/18/72/70.5/124/6331. The Pines Golf Club at Marana 520-744-7443, 8480 N. Continental Links Dr., Tucson. Public/18/72/68.1/123/5810. Fred Enke Golf Course 520-791-2539, 8251 E. Irvington Rd., Tucson. Public/18/72/6,807/137. Preserve Golf Club 520-825-9022, 66567 E. Catalina Hills, Tucson.Public/18/72/69.9/130/6392. The Gallery Golf Club 520-744-4700, 14000 N. Dove Mountain Blvd., Marana. South: Private/18/72/71.5/128/6828, North: Private/18/72/70.6/134/6576. 520-625-4281, 110 N. Abrego Drive, Green Valley.18/72/6,867/117. Quail Creek Country Club 520-393-5802, 2010 E Quail Crossing Blvd, Green Valley. Private/18/72/70.4/127/6489. Canoa Ranch Golf Course 520-393-1966, 5800 S. Camino del Sol, Green Valley. Semi-Private/18/72/68/120/6040. Country Club of Green Valley 520-625-8831, 77 Paseo de Golf, Green Valley. Private/18/72/6,738/124. Crooked Tree Golf Course 520-744-3322, 9101 N. Thornydale Rd., Tucson. Public/18/72/6,896/130. Del Lago Golf Club 520-647-1100, 14155 E. Via Rancho del Lago, Vail. Public/18/73/7,206/135. 78 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Oro Valley Country Club 520-297-3322, 300 W. Greenock Dr., Oro Valley. Private/18/72/6,964/129. Randolph North Golf Course 520-791-4161, 600 S. Alvernon Way. Tucson. Dell Urich Course: Public/18/72/67.1/112/5939, Randolph North Course: Public/18/72/70./120/6436. desertgolfandtennis.com Golfclubs Rio Rico Resort & Country Club 520-281-8567, 1069 Camino A la Posada, Rio Rico. Semi-Private/18/72/7,119/128. Torres Blancas Golf Course 520-625-5200, 3233 S. Abrego Dr., Green Valley. Semi-Private/18/72/69/123/6371. Rolling Hills Golf Club 520-298-2401, 8900 E. 29th St., Tucson. Private/18/72/59.9/90/4146. Trini Alvarez El Rio Golf Course 520-791-4229, 1400 W. Speedway Blvd., Tucson. Public/18/72/68.5/119/6090. SaddleBrooke Country Club 520-825-2505, 64500 E. Saddlebrooke Blvd., Tucson. Saddlebrooke/Catalina: Private/18/72/67.3/116/5842, Saddlebrooke/Tucson: Private /18/72/68.1/121/6033, Tucson/Catalina: Private/18/72/68.2/122/6005. Tubac Golf Resort 520-398-2021, Box 1297, #1 Otero Rd., Tubac. Resort/18/71/6,776/128. Tucson National, The Club 520-575-7540, 2727 W. Club Dr., Tucson. Orange/Gold: Resort/18/72/71.6/133/6549, Gold/Green: Resort/18/72/70.3/136/6319, Green/Orange: Resort/18/72/69.5/133/6146. Ventana Canyon, The Lodge at 520-828-5701, 6200 N. Clubhouse Lane, Tucson. Canyon: Semi-Private /18/72/70.2/137/6289 Mountain: Semi-Private /18/72/70.5/139/6346. Tucson Country Club 520-298-2381, 2950 N. Camino Principal, Tucson. Private/18/72/6,809/123. Vistoso, The Golf Club at 520-797-9900, 955 W. Vistoso Highlands Dr., Tucson. Public/18/72/6,935/145. San Ignacio Golf Club 520-648-3469, 4201 S. Camino Del Sol, Green Valley. Public/18/71/6,704/136. Santa Rita Country Club 520-762-5620, 16461 S. Houghton Rd., Tucson. Semi-Private/18/72/122/6042. Silverbell Golf Course 520-791-5235, 3600 N. Silverbell Rd, Tucson. Public/18/72/69.6/119/6361. Skyline Country Club 520-299-1111, 5200 E. St. Andrews, Tucson. Private/18/71/6,123/118. Starr Pass Golf Course 520-670-0400, 3645 West 22nd St, Tucson. Rattler/Coyote: Resort/18/72/71.2/135/6578 Classic: Resort/18/72/71.8/135/6686. Stone Canyon Country Club 520-219-1500, 945 W. Vistoso Highlands Dr., Tucson. Private/18/72/72./135/6683. The Views Golf Club at Oro Valley 520-825-3110, 1565 E. Rancho Vistoso Blvd, Oro Valley. Semi-Private/18/72/6,723/143 The Gallery Golf Club The publisher and staff of Desert Golf & Tennis make every effort to ensure accuracy in our maps and directories. Should you find any errors please email us with the corrections. Our desire is for our maps and directories to remain as current as possible; with your assistance we will achieve the highest level of accuracy. We value your input. maps@desertgolf&tennis.com PrivateGolfclubs-tucson CLUB #HOLES CC of Green Valley Desert Hills GC 49er Golf & CC The Gallery GC Lodge at Ventana Oro Valley CC Skyline CC The Stone Canyon Club Tucson CC 18 18 18 36 36 18 18 18 18 TYPE INITIATION FEE MONTHLY DUES Non Equity $1,000 Equity $1,500 Non Equity $500 Non Equity $15,000 non-refund Equity $17,000 Equity Market Price Equity $8,000 Non Equity $90,000 Equity Market Price $445 $200 $100 $720 $736 N/A $588 $825 $550 TRAIL FEE FOOD MIN. $0 $0 $0 $0 $900 $75/Q $1,325 $0 $1,430/A $900 $1,400 N/A Club $600 $0 $0 $0 $1200/A CAP OF MEMBERS FACILITIES 350 500 500 780 556 340 850 390 425 GS G GSF GTSFSp GTSFSp GTF GTSFSp GTSF GTSFSp PHONE (520) 625-8806 (520) 625-5090 (520) 749-4001 (520) 744-2555 (520) 577-1400 (520) 297-1121 (520) 299-1111 (520) 219-1500 (520) 298-6769 Note: All of the clubs indicated different priced memberships (individual, family, corporate, etc.) therefore, prices reflect information on family memberships if possible. The double asterisk indicates dual memberships. Facilities range from golf (G), tennis (T), swimming (S), fitness (F), and spa (Sp). Spa includes salon and massage therapy. Under Type of club, property represents land/membership only. Under Trail fee, club represents only club carts allowed DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 79 desertgolandtennis.com lasvegas Angel Park desertgolfer.com, 100 South Rampart Blvd., Las Vegas. Palm: Public/18/70/6,722/128 Mountain: Public/18/71/6,530/130. Anthem Country Club 702-614-5050, 1 Clubside Drive, Henderson, Private/18/72/7,267. 80 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 Arroyo Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 2250 Red Springs Drive, Las Vegas. Public/18/72/6,883/124. Bali Hai Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 5160 Las Vegas Blvd., Las Vegas. Public/18/72/7,050. Badlands Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 9119 Alta Drive, Las Vegas. Desperado-Diablo: Public/18/72/6,926/133.Desperado-Outlaw: Public/18/72/6,602/125.Diablo-Outlaw: Public/18/72/6,802/129. Bear’s Best Las Vegas Golf Course 702-804-8500, 11111 West Flamingo Rd, Las Vegas. Public/18/72/7,194. desertgolfandtennis.com Golfclubs Las Vegas Casablanca Golf Club 702-346-7529, 930 West Mesquite Blvd., Mesquite. Public/18/72/7,011/130. Legacy Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 130 Par Excellence Drive, Henderson. Public/18/72/7,233/136. 1. Angel Park 2. Anthem Country Club 4. Arroyo Golf Club 3. Badlands Golf Club 4. Bali Hai Golf Club 5. Bear’s Best Las Vegas Golf Course 6. Black Mountain Golf Club 7. Boulder City Golf Course 8. Callaway Golf Center 9. Canyon Gate Country Club 10. Casablanca Golf Club 11. Cascata Golf Club 12. Chaparral Country Club 13. Craig Ranch Golf Club 14. Desert Lakes Golf Club 15. Desert Pines Golf Club 16. Desert Rose Golf Club 17. Desert Willow Golf Course 18. DragonRidge Golf Club 19. Eagle Crest Golf Club 21. Falcon Ridge Golf Course 22. Highland Falls Golf Club 23. Lake View Executive Golf Course 24. Las Vegas Country Club 25. Las Vegas Golf Club 26. Las Vegas National Golf Club 27. Las Vegas Paiute Golf Resort 28. Legacy Golf Club 29. Los Prados Golf Club 30. Mojave Resort 31. The Oasis Golf Club 32. Painted Desert Golf Club 33. Palm Valley Golf Club 34. The Palms Golf Club 35. Primm Valley Golf Club 36. Red Rock Country Club 38. The Revere at Anthem 39. Rhodes Ranch 40. Rio Secco 41. Royal Links Golf Club 42. Shadow Creek Golf Club 43. Siena Golf Club 44. SilverStone Golf Club 45. Southshore at Lake Las Vegas Resort 46. Southern Highlands Golf Club 47. Spanish Trail Golf and Country Club 49. Sunrise Vista Golf Club 50. TPC at the Canyons 51. TPC at Summerlin 52. Wildhorse Golf Club 53. Willow Creek Golf Club 54. Wolf Creek 55. Tuscany Golf Club Cascata Golf Club 702-294-2000, 1 Cascata Drive, Boulder City, Public/18/72/143/7137. Los Prados Golf Club 702-645-5696, 5150 Los Prados Circle, Las Vegas. Semi-Private/18/70/5,350/107. Chaparral Country Club 520-758-3939, E. Mohave Dr., Bullhead City. Semi-Private/18/72. Mojave Resort 702-535-4653, 9905 Aha Macav Parkway, Laughlin. Resort/Public/18/72/6,939/126. Craig Ranch Golf Club 702-642-9700, 628 West Craig Road, Las Vegas. Public/18/70/6,001/105. The Oasis Golf Club 800-266-3313, 851 Oasis Blvd., Mesquite. Palmer: Public/18/72/6,982/141. Canyons: Public/18/71/6549. Black Mountain Golf Club 702-565-7933, 500 Greenway Road, Henderson. Semi-Private/27/72/6,550/123. Boulder City Golf Course 702-293-9236, 1 Clubhouse Drive, Boulder City. Public/18/72/6,561/110. Callaway Golf Center 702-896-4100, 6730 South Las Vegas Bldv., Las Vegas. Public. Open 6:30am-10:00pm. Driving range, Lessons (The Giant Golf Academy) and practice greens are available. Canyon Gate Country Club 702-363-0303, 2001 Canyon Gate Drive, Las Vegas. Private/18/72/6,742/125. Desert Lakes Golf Club 520-768-1000, Desert Lakes Dr., Bullhead City. Resort/18/72. Desert Pines Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 3415 E. Banzana Rd., Las Vegas, Public/18/71/6,810/122. Desert Rose Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 5483 Clubhouse Drive, Las Vegas. Public/18/71/6,511/117. Desert Willow Golf Course 702-263-4653, 2020 W. Horizon Ridge Pkwy, Henderson. Public/18/60/3,811/91. DragonRidge Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 552 South Stepahine Street, Henderson. Private/18/72/7,200. Eagle Crest Golf Club 702-240-1320, 2203 Thomas Ryan Blvd., Las Vegas. Semi-Private/18/60/4,067/96. Falcon Ridge Golf Course 702-346-6363, 345 Calais Dr., Mesquite. Public/18/71/6546. Highland Falls Golf Club 702-254-7010, 10201 Sun City Boulevard, Las Vegas. Semi-Private/18/72/6,512/126. Lake View Executive Golf Course 702-727-6388, 1471 Mount Charleston Drive, Pahrump. Public/18/59/3,587/77. Las Vegas Country Club 702-734-1122, 3000 Joe W. Brown Drive, Las Vegas. Private/18/72/7,164/117. Las Vegas Golf Club desertgolfer.com. 4300 West Washington, Las Vegas. Public/18/72/6,631/117. Las Vegas National Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 1911 East Desert Inn Rd., Las Vegas. Public/18/71/6,815/130. Las Vegas Paiute Golf Resort desertgolfer.com, 10325 Nu-Wav Kaiv Blvd., Las Vegas. Snow Mountain: Resort/18/72/7,146/125. Sun Mountain: Resort/18/72/7,112/130. Wolf: Resort/18/72/7,604/149. Painted Desert Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 555 Painted Mirage, Las Vegas. Public/18/72/6,840/136. Palm Valley Golf Club 702-363-4373, 9201 Del Webb Boulevard, Las Vegas. Semi-Private/18/72/6,849/127. The Palms Golf Club 800-621-0187, 2200 Hillside Drive, Mesquite. Public/18/72/7,008/137. Primm Valley Golf Club 702-679-5510, 1 Yates Well Road Exit, Primm. Lakes: Public/18/71/6,945/134. Desert: Public/18/72/7,131/138. Red Rock Country Club 702-304-5600, 2250 Red Springs Dr., Las Vegas. Mountain course: Private/18/72/7001. Arroyo course: Private/18/72/6883. The Revere at Anthem desertgolfer.com, 2600 Hampton Rd., Henderson, Public/18/72/7,143. Rhodes Ranch desertgolfer.com, 20 Rhodes Ranch Parkway, Las Vegas. Public/18/72/6,860/122. Rio Secco 702-889-2400, 2851 Grand Hills Drive, Las Vegas. Public/18/72/7,332/142. Royal Links Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 5995 Vegas Valley Blvd., Las Vegas. Public/18/72/7,029/135. Shadow Creek Golf Club 888-778-3387, 3 Shadow Creek Dr., North Las Vegas. Private/Resort/18/72/7,239/139. Siena Golf Club 800-727-8331 (Par-Tee1), 10575 Siena Monte Ave., Las Vegas. Public/18/71.5/6,843/129. SilverStone Golf Club 702-562-3770, 8600 Cupp Dr., Las Vegas. Desert: Public/9/36/3560 Mountain: Public/9/36/3599 Valley: Public/9/36/3398. Southshore at Lake Las Vegas Resort 702-558-0022, 100 Strada di Circolo, Henderson. Public/18/71/6,925/133. DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014 81 desertgolfandtennis.com lasvegasGolfclubs Southern Highlands Golf Club 702-263-1000, 1 Robert Trent Jones Ln., Las Vegas. Private/18/72/7,240. Spanish Trail Golf and Country Club 702-364-0357, 5050 Spanish Trail Lane, Las Vegas. Sunrise-Canyon: Private/18/72/7,002/124. Lakes-Sunrise: Private/18/72/6,957/131. Canyon-Lakes: Private/18/72/,7107/131. Sunrise Vista Golf Club 702-652-2602. 2841 Kinley Drive, Nellis. Eagle-Falcon: Public/Military/18/72/7,051/115 Raptor-Eagle: Public/Military /18/72/6,946/123. (See Map #49) TPC at the Canyons desertgolfer.com, 9851 Canyon Run Drive, Las Vegas. Public/18/71/7,063/131. TPC at Summerlin 702-256-0111, 1700 Village Center Circle, Las Vegas. Private/18/72/7,243/139. Tuscany Golf Club 1-866-TUSCANY, 901 Olivia Parkway, Henderson. Resort/Public/18/72/7,109/131. Wildhorse Golf Club desertgolfer.com, 2100 West Warm Springs Rd., Las Vegas. Public/18/72/7,041/131. Willow Creek Golf Club 775-727-4653, 1500 Red Butte Street, Pahrump. Semi-Private/18/71/7,025/124. Wolf Creek 866-252-4653, 403 Paradise Pkwy, Mesquite. Public/18/72/7,018. Wolf Creek The publisher and staff of Desert Golf & Tennis make every effort to ensure accuracy in our maps and directories. Should you find any errors please email us with the corrections. Our desire is for our maps and directories to remain as current as possible; with your assistance we will achieve the highest level of accuracy. We value your input. maps@desertgolf&tennis.com PrivateGolfclubs-lasvegas CLUB #HOLES Anthem CC Canyon Gate DragonRidge CC Las Vegas CC Red Rock CC Southern Highlands GC The GC at Southshore Spanish Trail CC TPC at Summerlin 18 18 18 18 36 18 18 27 18 TYPE Equity Non Equity Non Equity Equity Non Equity Non Equity Corp Equity Non Equity INITIATION FEE $10,000 $1,500 $80,000 $23,000 $12,000 $50,000 $10,000 $0 $40,000 MONTHLY DUES TRAIL FEE FOOD MIN. CAP OF MEMBERS FACILITIES $795 $574 $765 Floating $795 $1,360 $695 $700 $800 $900 $975 $1,200/A $1,050 $1,000 Cart $1,380/A $0 N/A $200/Q $800/A $300/Q $1,200 $1,200 $0 $1,200 $0 $200/Q 450 500 325 650 425 300 475 589 450 GTSFSp GTSF GTSFSp GTSFSp GTSFSp GTSFSp GSTF GTS GTS PHONE (702) 614-5000 (702)) 363-0303 (702) 614-4444 (702) 734-1122 (702) 304-5600 (702) 263-1000 (702) 568-5800 (702) 364-5050 (702) 256-0111 Note: All of the clubs indicated different priced memberships (individual, family, corporate, etc.) therefore, prices reflect information on family memberships if possible. The double asterisk indicates dual memberships. Facilities range from golf (G), tennis (T), swimming (S), fitness (F), and spa (Sp). Spa includes salon and massage therapy. Under Type of club, property represents land/membership only. Under Trail fee, club represents only club carts allowed 82 DesertGOlf&teNNis • OctOberNOvember2014