The golf courses at Kananaskis Country are located in the Rockies and the Mount Lorette course has two feature holes which conclude each loop of nine back at the clubhouse.
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The golf courses at Kananaskis Country are located in the Rockies and the Mount Lorette course has two feature holes which conclude each loop of nine back at the clubhouse.









Kananaskis Country (Mount Lorette)
Kananaskis Country Golf Course is located in the Rockies, near Canmore, a small town that can be reached within an hour by car from either Banff of Calgary in Alberta. There are two 18-hole, par 72, courses at Kananaskis, Mount Lorette and Mount Kidd at this 600-acre property.
Named after the nearby mountains that rise to 10,000 feet above sea level, the Kananaskis courses themselves are 5,000 feet above sea level, so your long game will be flattered as the golf ball travels a little further than normal in the thinner air. Try hard also to concentrate on your game, as the surroundings are simply sensational and quite a distraction.
The construction of both courses was part funded by the oil-rich Alberta government in the early 1980s and Robert Trent Jones Senior was the architect responsible for each layout. He routed the holes through pine forests around the Kananaskis River and glacial creeks, adding nearly one hundred and fifty bunkers for good measure.
With special rates available for seniors, juniors and Alberta residents, Kananaskis certainly promotes itself in the provision of affordable golf for all golfers. With complimentary valet parking as you arrive to the Summit restaurant and fireside lounge in the Robert Trent Jones Pavilion, the off-course experience matches all that the Mount Lorette and Mount Kidd courses have to offer.
Both Kananaskis courses were devastated by flooding in 2013 and were rebuilt by architect Gary Browning at a reputed cost of $23 million, with the province expecting to recoup three quarters of that sum from Ottawa’s disaster recovery program. Thirty-two of the thirty-six holes that were badly damaged by gravel, mud, silt and fallen trees had to be totally reconstructed from scratch. The Mount Lorette and Mount Kidd layouts re-opened in the summer of 2018.