The eagle is gone from Eagle Nest. Evicted
from his home overlooking the eighth fairway in 1989 by an
overbearing bag of wind named Hurricane Hugo. But although
the great bird is gone, the pursuit of birdies goes on at
this exceedingly popular North Myrtle Beach course. Eagle
Nest provides all the beauty you would expect at a South Carolina
resort course. Gently rolling terrain. Tall pines lining the
fairways. Cypress trees growing in ponds; willow trees gracing
their banks. But the real beauty lies in the way architect
Gene Hamm set up the course. Hamm starts you off easy, giving
you a virtually straight-away par five, handicap 14, stretching
492 yards from the whites. Then follows that with a delightful
little 332 yard par four, dogleg right, handicap 16. By then
you ought to be warmed up. And by the time you make your way
around the ponds and pines through the next thirteen holes,
you'll be ready for Hamm's big finale, the three toughest
finishing holes on the Grand Strand. Individually, they're
known by locals as Tough, Almost As Tough, and Lord Help Me
Over The Water. The 16th, the number one handicap hole, is
a 416 yard par four that gives you a choice. You can hit your
second shot into the water that cuts into the fairway from
the left. Or you can avoid the pond and fly it OB on the right.
Or you can thread the needle to the well guarded, undulating
green. The 17th, the number three handicap, is an ever so
gentle double dogleg that stretches a mere 576 yards. And
unless your name is Daly or Godzilla, you'll be laying up
short of the pond, and pitching to an elevated green. Don't
be short on that shot, though.....trap. Don't be long either.....trees.
The 18th, is only 164 yards, and only a handicap seven. And
if only you can get over the water that starts just below
the elevated tee, and ends just below the elevated green,
you'll do alright. Oh yes, watch out for the four traps that
guard the green. Eagle Nest is a fun course, with just the
right mixture of easy and hard holes to make your round interesting
and entertaining. It would be even more entertaining if the
eagle were still there. But who knows, if you're lucky you
might find an eagle of your own at that 576 yard 17th. And
wouldn't that be something to write home about?