Ledges Golf Club
About
The Ledges Golf Club in South Hadley is tucked away in the Pioneer Valley, an area of western Massachusetts known for its lush, rolling hills. It is a favorite amongst locals since it is one of the best values in the region. The course enjoys scenic views that stretch to Mt. Tom and the Holyoke Range. It is on the shorter side at just over 6,500 yards from the back tees, but the dramatic changes in elevation make it seem much longer. Most of the greens are raised with steeply sloped sides, making accuracy essential since missing them by even just a few feet will result in a serious penalty. The golf course has a heavily wooded front nine that seamlessly transitions into a more open back nine featuring links-style holes. The Ledges is a shotmaker's course that offers several interesting risk-reward opportunities.
Tee | Par | Length | Rating | Slope |
---|---|---|---|---|
Black | 72 | 6507 yards | 72.7 | 133 |
Blue | 72 | 6110 yards | 70.9 | 129 |
White | 72 | 5539 yards | 67.8 | 124 |
Red (W) | 72 | 5001 yards | 69.5 | 125 |
Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Out | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | In | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Black M: 71.8/129 | 406 | 448 | 106 | 305 | 489 | 315 | 143 | 371 | 560 | 3143 | 579 | 420 | 230 | 430 | 199 | 287 | 298 | 397 | 524 | 3364 | 6507 |
Blue M: 69.9/126 | 386 | 424 | 96 | 276 | 456 | 300 | 123 | 349 | 528 | 2938 | 564 | 405 | 215 | 397 | 176 | 270 | 273 | 372 | 500 | 3172 | 6110 |
White M: 67.2/121 W: 72.3/128 | 338 | 380 | 96 | 255 | 406 | 268 | 106 | 310 | 469 | 2628 | 535 | 370 | 176 | 377 | 153 | 244 | 273 | 339 | 444 | 2911 | 5539 |
Red M: 64.2/114 W: 69.4/123 | 309 | 349 | 74 | 235 | 380 | 242 | 106 | 290 | 409 | 2394 | 480 | 339 | 159 | 337 | 129 | 220 | 235 | 299 | 409 | 2607 | 5001 |
Handicap | 5 | 1 | 17 | 11 | 7 | 13 | 15 | 9 | 3 | 8 | 2 | 6 | 4 | 14 | 18 | 16 | 12 | 10 | |||
Par | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 36 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 36 | 72 |
Course Details
Rentals/Services
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Policies
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RestaurantAvailable Facilities
Clubhouse, Meeting Facilities, Banquet FacilitiesReviews
Reviewer Photos
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Photo submitted by twizzard82 on 08/16/2022
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Ledges Number Four, Par 4, 276. The fairway is narrow, with precious little bail-out to its right. A driveable hole for the bold. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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# Nine, Par 5, 528. These bunkers will snare many an approach shot that is sliced or pushed. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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The 10th is a classic downhill par-5 of 564; it’s a three-shotter for all but very long, straight hitters. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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The massive bunker that sides green eleven could be a nightmare for those who aren’t all that handy with a sand wedge. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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Eighteen (from the left rough): Great finisher where you’ll want to avoid every one of the seven fairway bunkers, including these three. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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The final hole as seen from its right rough. Getting up and down around this green is no simple task. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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Photo submitted by u314159642024 on 09/28/2019
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130 Safarians can't be wrong! Photo submitted by Bullguy on 08/18/2017
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Photo submitted by u000007635743 on 08/13/2016
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Photo submitted by u000007635743 on 08/13/2016
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Photo submitted by u000007635743 on 08/13/2016
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First hole Panoramic shot Photo submitted by cyrusjun on 08/21/2013
Ledges Always Good
Always worth the trip from Central Mass. to play Ledges. Fairways lush despite drought and greens in good shape. Play slowed down on back nine, but to be expected on a Saturday.
Nice day
Ledges is always in good shape and the course is a fun challenge. It's not overly long but plenty of bunkers still make a challenge. Staff is nice and we got around in 4:15 which is acceptable for a Saturday at 10a. Play here a couple of times a season and will continue to play.
Almost 5 stars
Course was in great condition. The only problem was the pace, they need someone to hurry people along. My group and 5 others got stuck behind someone and they definitely needed a nudge. Otherwise, great course for the $40 we paid to play.
Great golf course with unique holes and risk-reward shots
The Ledges is a unique layout. It winds through forests and lakes. There are some short Par4 holes that are risk-reward drives usually over or near water. I played as a single and when I play it again, I will have a better idea where to aim my drives since there are sloping fairways right or left. Also, I didn't get a good feel for the speed and breaks of the greens (which held pretty well). I highly recommend the Ledges
Great condition
Always in great shape!
Playable with awesome greens
Great course/ fair players
The course was great and maintained very well and staff was great, I will keep coming back. Got pushed the entire time by a group of players who constantly hit balls at us when we were still hitting.
Ledges June 23, 22
Course had received a good amount of rain the day before so there were a few damp spots which also made the greens roll a bit slow. Overall good to excellent, great day weather wise, 81 from the blues, not bad.
Challenging, Strategic, and Original
At first glance, Ledges Golf Club may seem like a “modern” golf track, and in a few ways it is. It’s a course whose style is hard to classify. But with only one water hazard, no forced carries, no greens set on peninsulas or islands, no monster bunkers that are horrendously elongated or elaborately shaped, few ultra-large greens and few narrow fairways, it seems that Course Architect Howard Maurer simply eschewed many modern design staples.
What kind of track is it? Ledges certainly isn’t reminiscent of modern icons such as Pete Dye’s Harbour Town or Jack Nicklaus’ Grand Cypress courses (to cite two standard-bearers whose creations exhibited the kind of 70’s modernism that has dominated for decades). Here, instead, the scattered bunkering–with an emphasis on fairway traps–looks more like what is found at a links course like Royal Lytham & St. Anne’s in England. Positioned hundreds of yards from the ocean, not next to it, Lytham is also similar because, atypically for a links course, it has a fair amount of trees. Unlike Lytham, though, Ledges rolls over some huge hills, not just dunes; it is far more rugged than the vast majority of British linksland courses. What it adds, though, especially on holes one and nine, along with most of the back nine, is a further links-like feel: many wide fairways, some seventy bunkers, and an underabundance of trees on many holes which creates an openness that gives your drives more airspace.
What I found at Ledges on my first play, as well, was an original, varied, great-looking hybrid-styled layout, sweeping over the upper, western side of the property with drama, its landscape looking like the kind that a Hudson River School artist might paint–especially from the clubhouse and certain other vantage points.
The course is short even from the blue tees (6,110), but Maurer made a potential weakness into a strength. Each of a short quartet of par-4’s (300 or fewer yards) is cleverly designed and encourages tactical play, allowing for birdie opportunities where players are willing to take the risks. On the front side, a pair of very short three-pars (96 and 123 yards) add to the list of holes where accuracy with short irons may lower your score. Holes two through eight are also immersed in woodlands, so spraying the ball around on the fairways or over the greens will spell trouble.
So the front side is no slouch, and you’ll have to play careful golf to score, especially on approach shots and around the greens. Then Ledges finds a higher gear on the more arduous back side: not only do three longer par-4s toughen things up, but the par-3’s average 196 yards, and a pair of challenging par-5’s will also keep you on your toes.
There are many top-notch holes on this outstanding layout, but I’ll describe some of the best, as played from the blue tees:
FOUR OUTSTANDING HOLES
Nine, Par-5, 528.
Playing uphill to a wide fairway off the tee, doglegging left, it will tempt big hitters to cut the corner, where three bunkers lie in wait for misses. After the bend, the hole progresses straightaway to the green, with the second shot guarded by another trio of bunkers some 60 yards from the green, designed to catch sliced or pushed shots. The #3 index, nine is open all the way down the right side, but it will punish severely most leftward misses.
Eighteen, Par-5, 500.
The finisher possesses similar rigor to the ninth. Playing uphill from tee to green and doglegging a bit right, the hole puts another premium on the second shot, where this time a hook or pull will be snared by a nest of leftward bunkers positioned to catch the overambitious. The well-defended green narrows down in the front; it’s a tight target for running the ball onto the surface.
Eleven, Par-4, 405.
Maybe the best four-par on the golf course. Uphill from the tee; doglegging-left; three big traps defending the inside of the dogleg. The second shot is even tougher to an elevated green angled to the fairway, and most of its front protected by a yawning bunker. A terrific challenge, and the #2 index.
Sixteen, Par-4, 273.
One of the drivable holes, and oh-so-tempting from the tee. Many will want to slash a driver at the green, a green defended like Fort Knox. Two bunkers lie 30 yards short of the putting surface to catch hooks; another pair flanks the front of the green. The actual line of approach for bouncing a ball on this green is angled and narrow, so to make this a one-shotter your drive must be near-perfect.
CONDITIONING:
Outstanding for a public course (and amazing for a muni), this is the best-conditioned track I’ve played since Wintonbury Hills early last fall. Only a few fairways on the front side had patches in places. The greens ran fast and, although sometimes hard to read, were ultra-smooth.
PACE of PLAY:
The one fly in the ointment, though a big one. Four and ½ hours, no course marshals. Perhaps it was the holiday?
OTHER STUFF:
The clubhouse is very neat, attractive, and spacious enough, with a good restaurant, from what I’ve heard. The friendly and professional staff didn’t disappoint. Three great playing partners kept things interesting (two of them just getting into the game but more than competent) making for a nice foursome.
SOME CONCLUSIONS:
The layout is so good here that I’d rate it six stars if that were possible. It’s strategic and challenging, and playing it as a whole is just sheer fun. The value, too, is very strong. A minor criticism: I was not crazy about the extremely narrow fairway at the fourth, as with even a well-played shot I missed it by a couple of yards. Unfortunately, slow play diminished the full experience today.
But a must-play golf course? That would only be understating it.
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Ledges Number Four, Par 4, 276. The fairway is narrow, with precious little bail-out to its right. A driveable hole for the bold. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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# Nine, Par 5, 528. These bunkers will snare many an approach shot that is sliced or pushed. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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The 10th is a classic downhill par-5 of 564; it’s a three-shotter for all but very long, straight hitters. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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The massive bunker that sides green eleven could be a nightmare for those who aren’t all that handy with a sand wedge. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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Eighteen (from the left rough): Great finisher where you’ll want to avoid every one of the seven fairway bunkers, including these three. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022
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The final hole as seen from its right rough. Getting up and down around this green is no simple task. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 06/22/2022