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KOOINDAH WATERS
Words and Photography: brendan james
ENTERING ITS THIRD YEAR OF PLAY, KOOINDAH WATERS’ ROUGH EDGES HAVE DISAPPEARED AND
THE QUALITY OF THE ROSS WATSON AND CRAIG PARRY DESIGN IS STARTING TO SHINE THROUGH.
Throughout his playing career, Craig Parry won
tournaments using sound strategy complemented by
good ball-striking and a world class short game.
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Courtesy of You Tube and Mark Pavy |
As the co-designer of Kooindah Waters – near Wyong, on
NSW’s Central Coast – he brought those elements of golfing brains over
brawn to the design table and the result is challenging and enjoyable.
Parry collaborated with highly acclaimed course designer Ross
Watson on the Kooindah Waters design. He said he and Watson had
few constraints in coming up with the design as the land was at and pretty lifeless.
“You could say it was a blank canvas … there was nothing we
had to incorporate, no special feature that needed inclusion,” he
said. “And, because of that, we were able to create a very good golf
course that will test the strategy of every golfer, no matter how good,
or bad, they are at the game.”
Kooindah Waters, in modern terms, is certainly not a long course
at 6,083 metres from the back pegs. Length was never a major issue
for the design team because they did not set out to create a brutal
test of the game that large sections of the golf-playing public might
be intimidated by.
“One philosophy we had about Kooindah from day one was that
it had to be user-friendly,” Parry said. “When the course was almost finished I would go out with my young boys and hit some shots and if
it was too hard they would not want to go back.
“The last thing you want to do, especially with a public access
course, is scare people away after one round. You don’t want them going away saying, ‘I’m never gonna play that golf course again.’
Then they tell their friends and before too long your course has a
reputation for being too hard or not being fair.”
Kooindah Waters was playing even shorter than its scorecard
distance when I visited there recently. While it is not a links course,
the fairways were firm under foot, as were the greens … courtesy
of the hot Australian summer. The playing surfaces were wellmaintained
and a pleasure to hit off and putt on.
But the firmness really changed the whole complexion of the
course I had previously played, which featured lush, slow running
fairways and well watered greens.
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The maturing of trees alongside the fairway and behind the green have turned the 161-metre par-3 4th into a beautiful hole. |
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