Dual Courses Make the Trip to French Lick Seem Easy
I am used to "remote." Born, raised and a resident of Texas, I've traveled all over the back roads and through the tiny towns of the largest state in the Contiguous 48. I know all about getting away and have been to my fair share of crossroads in burgs with single blinking lights as the only traffic control.
Vistas are Amazing at the Dye Course
But I've never felt as isolated as when I drove from Indianapolis to French Lick in the far southern part of the Hoosier State. A map will show that French Lick is just a two-and-a-half-hour drive from Indy and an hour less than that from Louisville, Ky., to the east. But the journey - though a series of increasingly smaller roads and through rolling fields and dales - is almost a step back in time as well as a trek to remoteness.
It's at the fabulous French Lick Resort where the well-heeled have come in droves since the mid-1850s to escape the city, to enjoy the healing waters of the area's mineral springs, to revel in the opulence of the West Baden Springs Hotel and to play golf at, initially anyway, a course designed by the legendary Donald Ross that opened in 1917.
In 2009, with the approval of casino gambling in French Lick attracting visitors and their money not seen since before the Great Depression, a second course was built - this one by Indiana's own Pete Dye, arguably the most important golf architect of the 20th century's last 25 years.
The two courses, both notable in their own right for their individual challenge and beauty, have combined to make a trip to French Lick a must for golfers. The fact that the other amenities in the tiny town are also top-drawer just adds to the appeal.Read more at..... http://www.cybergolf.com/golf_news/dual_courses_make_the_trip_to_french_lick_seem_easy
It's at the fabulous French Lick Resort where the well-heeled have come in droves since the mid-1850s to escape the city, to enjoy the healing waters of the area's mineral springs, to revel in the opulence of the West Baden Springs Hotel and to play golf at, initially anyway, a course designed by the legendary Donald Ross that opened in 1917.
In 2009, with the approval of casino gambling in French Lick attracting visitors and their money not seen since before the Great Depression, a second course was built - this one by Indiana's own Pete Dye, arguably the most important golf architect of the 20th century's last 25 years.
The two courses, both notable in their own right for their individual challenge and beauty, have combined to make a trip to French Lick a must for golfers. The fact that the other amenities in the tiny town are also top-drawer just adds to the appeal.Read more at..... http://www.cybergolf.com/golf_news/dual_courses_make_the_trip_to_french_lick_seem_easy
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