Category: Michigan Golf
Michigan is a golf-mad state, with more than 800 public golf courses; more per capita than any other in the United States. This section is for reviews of Michigan courses, as well as Michigan golf news and events.
First Snow of Autumn
We got our first snow of the year yesterday. Here’s a photo of the blooms in Mrs. GolfBlogger’s rose garden at 6:00 this morning.
Sad.
Very sad.
Indian Summer
The temperatures hit 72 degrees yesterday in Michigan—not a record, but close. It was an absolutely perfect day for golf. I had already voted in the morning, so my afternoon was open for what I like to do best.
Michigan States’ Forest Akers West Golf Course - A Review
Forest Akers Golf Course Review
Overall Grade: A
Value: A ($40, depending upon time and day of the week)
Walkability: A
Course Conditions: A+
Course Design: A
Practice Facility: ?
Food:?
Teacher’s Comments: A great course.
A graduate of the University of Michigan, I ventured into enemy territory this past summer, traveling to East Lansing to play Michigan State’s renowned Forest Akers East golf course.
It was worth the trip. Forest Akers is a delightful course that meanders through a working arboretum, offering a nice variety of holes, and impeccable grooming.
The Forest Akers course was built in 1958 on land donated to the University by Mr. Forest Akers. In his gift, he specified that in addition to a golf course, the land also should be preserved as an arboretum.
It was a wonderful idea that gives the course a unique character. The variety of trees on the course here simply is stunning (my only complaint might be that there were not plaques on or near the trees telling me what they all were).
The original course design was done by Bruce Matthews. It was rerouted and reworked in 1992 by Michigan State alumnus Arthur Hills.
One of the things I liked most about the course is that it is accessible to players of all skill levels. Afraid that it would prove as difficult as the University of Michigan’s, I played from the whites and shot one of the better scores of my summer.
That doesn’t mean that Forest Akers is easy. Off the tee, the careless player will fall into well placed traps and find himself out of position. Heroic shots sometimes are required. I felt challenged, but never overmatched.
The course is walkable, but you need to be in relatively good shape. Distances from green to the next tee are not long, but there are some elevation changes that may leave you huffing.
My favorite hole was the par 4 fifth. Measuring 340 yards, it’s a downhill dogleg left, with some tall trees on the inside corner. It offers the temptation of cutting the corner to get within a wedge of the green, or playing the safe shot to the outside, leaving a much longer approach.
I, of course, chose the safe option, hit a high fade instead, cleared the trees and miracalously found myself a sand wedge from the green.
Another fun hole is the 422 yard, par 4 eighteenth. Also a dogleg, it has a narrow fairway set on a ridge. The inside is guarded by bunkers, prairie grass and further down, a swamp. From the bend, a player must hit a long high shot ( I used a seven wood), over a gulley to a green perched on a hill. Steep bunkers guard the front of the green.
I could go on. There are another half dozen holes that I clearly remember providing interesting challenges.
Grooming at Forest Akers was impeccable, as befits the home course of a University nationally recognized for its turfgrass and agriculture programs. I saw just one green with a significant blemish, and that was in a spot that—because of the location of the trees—had shade issues.
This is a course that any resident of the state—and any visitors to the area—should seek out. I plan to return next summer.
But this time I’ll remember to wear green.
You can see more photos in a tour of Forest Akers West here.
Tullymore Golf Club Photos
Tullymore is rated #14 on Golf Digest’s public courses. I had a chance to play it that past week, and you can see photos in my gallery here. It’s a wonderfully pretty course.
Tullymore Hole 2
Tullymore Golf Club
Stanwood, Michigan
Hole 2 456 Yards
I took advantage of the great weather on Thursday to drive to Stanwood, Michigan (about three hours from GolfBlogger World Headquarters) to play the Tullymore Golf Club. The Jim Engh design is raked 14th on Golf Digest’s list of the 100 best public courses.
It’s an amazing track. I’ll have a review/appreciation later.
Michigan has three of the top 20 courses. I’ve now played two of them, Tullymore and Forest Dunes. You can read my review / appreciation of Forest Dunes here.




