| Shillong Golf Club
Close
to the Polo Ground is one of the most attractive locales of the
town, the Shillong Golf Club. Golf was introduced to Shillong
in 1898 by a group of British Civil Service officers who initially
constructed a nine hole course at an area called Laban. lt was
only after the first world war that Shillong gained popularity
as a golf resort for European golfers from East Bengal and Calcutta,
and in 1924 the present 18 hole course with its picturesque club
house was inaugurated.
The layout of the new course was done by Capt.
Jackson and C.K.Rhodes, who were remarkably successful in preserving
the natural beauty of the area while giving it an excellent layout.
The course is set in an undulating valley covered with thick groves
of pine and rhododendron trees. The tight fairways are carpeted
with an indigenous species of lo cal grass which hardens the soil
and makes the course tough to play. The longest hole on the course
is the 594 yards, sixth, which makes it an extremely trying hole,
and also one of the longest in India.
The tight fairways are difficult to negotiate
in any case, but the task is made even more trying by the number
of 'out-of-bounds' streams that criss-cross almost every fairway.
Most of the approaches are uphill shots, and even veterans opt
to play safe. The greens are as challenging as the fairways. They
are lightning fast and are invariably trapped by heavy sand bunkers.
The 372 yards, par five, ninth hole is a dog
leg, and one of the most picturesque on the course. The tee off
is from a pine grove elevated some 200 feet above the fairway.
The tiger line is onto a steep ridge and to the left of the single
pine tree which demarcates the common eighth and ninth fairway.
The second shot is placed into the elbow of the dog leg which
is in a valley, and from where the green is now visible on a hillock
ahead. The third stroke has to be lofted to gain height as well
as negotiate the tight fairway. It requires a good chip and a
lucky putt to get a par on this hole, as the area around the green
is uneven, and the green itself extremely fast. Not only is the
Shillong course scenic and enjoyable, it's also challenging. Obstructions
don't come only in the form of bunkers and trees, but also rain.
Shillong is just 56 km from the wettest place in the world! |