Designed by Arthur Davis and opened for public play in 1992, the course at Fields Ferry Golf Club extends to 6,586 yards from the back markers, with water coming into play at several of the holes.
Overall rating
Designed by Arthur Davis and opened for public play in 1992, the course at Fields Ferry Golf Club extends to 6,586 yards from the back markers, with water coming into play at several of the holes.
Fields Ferry
Georgia-based architect Arthur Davis was given the opportunity to create an adventurous route at Fields Ferry, and he all but lived up to its title; water hazards abound and you may need help from a boat in finding wayward balls.
The bold flavor of the course is established early as players approach into the No. 2 par five, where a minefield of seven pot bunkers guard the landing area. The next hole, a par three, is a carry across a pond to a well-bunkered par three...but that’s still far from the most thrilling short hole featuring a forced carry at Fields.
No. 17 opens with a similar tee shot, but players will also need to navigate a chimney — the remnant of a long-since-collapsed structure — that rises from a bunker fronting the green. This hole is sandwiched by two par fives, both of which feature risk-reward opportunities for players willing to carry a pond to an island green (the former hole) or weave an inlet and a row of bunkers leading up to the green (the latter).
Those driving between the golf hotspots of Atlanta and Chattanooga, TN may consider swinging by this public-access facility.