| Ooty Golf Club
Ooty Golf Club Highlights |
| Year of Foundation |
1896 (incorporated). Became 'greens' in 1929
a
Ross Thompsan designed golf course. |
| Altitude |
7,600 feet |
| Open |
Round the year |
| No. of Holes |
18 |
Yardage |
6,235 yards |
| Par |
72 |
Playing Conditions |
Guests can be brought in by members, and walk-in guests,
called casuals, can also play. |
| Club Facilities |
Acomodation, Restaurant, Bar, Swimming, Indoor
Games |
Golfing Facilities |
Driving Range, Putting Green |
| Accommodation |
Six huts; annexe with ten rooms. |
|
The
Ooty golf course follows the soft contours of downland, with its
tonsured effect of tree-bare heights, ringed with gorse and thickly
wooded copses of eucalyptus, oak, rhododendron and fir in the hollows.
The course is surrounded by the thickly wooded Avalanch Range.
The altitude of 7,600feet, a few degrees above the equator, provides
a combination of light and thin air which is a near intoxicant,
and the ball travels much further than it would in the plains because
of the rarefied atmosphere. The Ooty golf course is not only scenic
but also quite trying, and it would be wise for the visitor to play
only nine of the 18 holes on the first day.
Nine
of the 18 holes on the Ooty course are blind in that you cannot
see the green from the tee because of the undulating landscape.
Guide posts fixed on the intervening ridges give the player the
necessary directions. The most gruelling hole on this course is
the fifth, all uphill and a good 200 feet higher. But the green
is rewarding, with a breathtaking view across the hill ranges.
The most exciting green is undoubtedly the 13th. It's here that
the player could be interrupted by the baying of hounds as he
bumps into a fox hunt in progress. Dating back to 1847, the Ooty
hunt has carried on uninterrupted, and Class I foxhounds and beagles
are still bred and trained here.
The Ooty fairways are lush but tight, and the
greens are large and well maintained. A unique feature of the Ooty
greens is the fencing that protects them from the wild animals that
occasionally stroll on the course. In fact, a pug mark or a hoof
print is a free lift! Where could anyone play more challenging golf?
Crowning the Nilgiri mountains in the south
of India is the town of Ooty, as Ootacamund is more popularly known.
Viewed from Coimbatore (89 km), the blue mountains, as the Nilgiris
literally denote, seem to be permanently enveloped in blue. This
could be brought about by the large number of gum trees that dot
the mountain side, or by the gentle mist, which is so characteristic
of the local weather. Ooty, at an altitude of 2,286 metres, is characterised
by gently undulating downs and neatly planted tea gardens. It was
Ooty's Wenlock Downs that caught the eye of Col. Ross Thompson,
who wasted no time in converting the spectacular area into a golf
course, and founded the Ootacamund Gymkhana Club in 1896. The Wenlock
Downs closely resemble the South Downs of Sussex, complete with
yellow flowered prickly gorse bushes.
|