The enchanting Ashridge Golf Club is set amongst thousands of acres of National Trust-owned woodland. The scene is set as you drive to the clubhouse.









Ashridge Golf Club
The enchanting Ashridge Golf Club is set amongst thousands of acres of National Trust-owned woodland. The scene is set as you drive to the clubhouse.









4.5
A delightful traverse through lush, mature woodland – Ashridge is a course with a pleasant, peaceful feel that also hits the mark from a quality standpoint.
Stepping out of the excellent clubhouse, centrally positioned within the course, you are met with what feels like a mini ‘golfing village’, with four tree-lined holes and a practice area all visible. The course is a set of holes that run through mature woodland, with the shape of each hole often dictated by the route that small valleys take between the trees.
This is very much the case with the first two holes, both turning right to left (as several holes do) with high-banked fairways that funnel the ball back centrally. Green complexes are a major defence – the putting surfaces are fair and run superbly, and there is sand in places, prevalent on the challenging fourth hole, for example, but there are subtle run-offs around many greens that prevent a poor approach from reaching the target.
The back nine includes three par fives, all of which are relatively modest in length, and the greens are reachable in firmer Summer conditions. Avoid disasters on the 14th, which is a longer par 4 turning right to left into a green with an incline at the front, and 16, which is a mid-length par 3 with a pond and overhanging beech tree on the right-hand side, and the back side feels like it can be attacked if tee shots are kept in play.
Both nines finish with excellent par 4s descending down hills to the centralised collection of greens and tees sitting in front of the clubhouse. The ninth is a particularly fine shorter hole, with a fairway that feeds the ball down the slope, the resulting approach has deep bunkers awaiting short left and right of a testing green which slopes from back right to front left.
The quality of all golfing surfaces is without question, and there is a tranquillity and an Englishness to the holes carving through the dense green trees. The course played relatively kindly in Summer – I had read that some of the long grass was far more penal in times gone by, but the generous shape of many holes and the gettable length of the par fives mean that a score is available.
Overall, Ashridge is a very pleasant place to visit – the golf course offers just enough intrigue to challenge, and at the same time enjoying the serenity of a stroll through rolling English greenery.
Overall rating
4.5
Overall rating
4.5
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