Tumble Creek Club at Suncadia

Tumble Creek Club at Suncadia
501 Honolulu Dr.
Cle Elum, WA 98922
7,080-yards, Par-71/Slope 135/Rating 74.1
Prior to visiting the Tumble Creek Club at Suncadia I ‘Tweeted” our tee time to my 847 Twitter followers, hoping for some intelligence on the golf course. Minutes later, @dustinjo from Sammamish sent me a reply, stating: “Played @tumblecreek in July. Holes 1-13, 18 are world class. 2nd best course I’ve played in WA, behind Chambers Bay.”
The Tom Doak-designed Tumble Creek is, as @dustinjo had claimed, world-class. Surrounded by wooded peaks, with the scent of Cedar in the air, any golf course in this setting would seem sublime, but adding a Doak-design to the mix has created a mountain golf experience that is second only to ocean-side golf. As with Doak’s heralded Pacific Dunes course in Bandon, Ore., Tumble Creek was infinitely playable and fair.
Unlike @dustinjo, I’d say holes 14-16 represented the creme de la creme at Tumble Creek. Holes 1-13, and 17 and 18 were certainly worthy of signature distinction, but the biggest thrills happened late on the back nine, with the score hanging in the balance.
When standing on the elevated tee at the 605-yard, par-5 14th hole, the green seems miles away, barely visible behind a ridge and around the right-to-left dogleg. A mirror-pond borders the left side of the fairway, extending almost the length of the hole, and a deep bunker is positioned on the right corner of the dogleg, begging players to clear it from the tee. This is a three-shot hole, with the pond coming into play on the second shot. If possible, keep your wedge approach below the hole, or suffer an ugly three-putt.
On the short, 515-yard, par-5 15th you are presented with a tough decision: go for it by carrying a drive at least 260-yards over a creek to a narrow landing strip; or play conservative by hitting a 180-200-yard shot short of the creek. The bold play, if successful, will leave you a shot of about 180-200 yards into an elevated green surrounded by bunkers on the right, and water on the left. Truly a beautiful and exciting hole.

Not your cup of tea? The 'window view' from the Championship tee box at the 425-yard, par-4 16th hole
The 16th hole only ranked as the 14th-hardest hole on the golf course, somehow, but sure didn’t play like it. I suppose if you never play golf from the tips and have never looked behind you to notice those crazy tee boxes perched by themselves on hillsides and behind canyons and rivers, you might never notice a tee box like the one on 16.
The picture above gives you an idea of the ‘window view’ created by a cut-out of the surrounding trees and bushes, but does nothing to simulate the actual feeling of hitting through this box.
“Tumble Creek is a special place,” said the club’s legendary head pro, Bill Tindall, who came out of retirement when the club opened in 2005 to lead the staff at Tumble Creek. “There are not many courses where can you remember every hole after playing it for the first time, which speaks to the individuality of each hole. The consistent challanges of all shots to, and on the greens keeps players working all day- not to speak of the normal breezes.”
Typically, prevailing winds sweep through the huge, wooded valley that Tumble Creek is delicately carved out of, making it an unruly test. During the 2008 US Open Sectional Qualifying, which took place under blustery conditions, 1-under par took the medalist position. However, on windless and sunny days, like the one we experienced, the golf course was wonderfully playable and at the same time, stuningly beautiful.
The conditioning of the course was second (so far) only to the Nicklaus Course at Pronghorn, in Bend, Ore. The greens at Tumble Creek were like slick works of art devoid of a single ball mark, the fairways like divot-less emerald rugs, and the bunkering beautiful, with each one’s leading edge carved to resemble the ridges of the surrounding Cascade mountains. From each tee box players are given a visual cue, be that a bunker in the fairway, a burned out pine tree, or a mountain peak in the distance.
Each time we have reviewed a Doak course, I was left thinking, ‘man, he thought of everything!’
His golf courses return the game to an art form, where players who draw, or fade the ball 30-yards out on each shot are rewarded, or those who like to chip with their putter achieve unmeasured short-game success on greens and chipping areas designed for low-ball play, or where those who like to visualize their game based on tools based in nature find those natural landmarks in abundance.
As Tindall said, “Tom Doak is a genius. It took him only five months to transform this beautiful land into a spectacular golf course.”
Signature Holes (not including 14-16):
#6 — the 6th is a Doak-special. Listed at 425-yards you’ll want to bring the thunder on your drive to clear the canyon and the bunker guarding the fairway. Hit it to the left of the pine tree in front of the bunker, however, and you’ll hit the ’speed-slot’, providing at least 30 more yards of distance. From the tee it looks like a small runway. Blow up the picture for a better view.
#9 — the 9th is another speed-slot special. Listed at 455-yards , the 9th is the #1 handicap hole. From the tee it looks menacing, but hit your drive on the left side of the fairway towards the canyon splitting the mountains in the backround, however, and you’ll hit the ’speed slot’, taking the 7-iron out of your hands on the approach and replacing it with a wedge. The green on the 9th is precarious — it looks like its perched on a summit, and it slopes severely from left to right.
#18 — wondering where that double-bogey is lurking at Tumble Creek? You know, the one that can ruin a great round? It’s hiding at the 18th, waiting for you in the bushes/scrub behind the bunkers to the right of the green. At 485-yards from the tips a good drive will leave you at long approach, uphill, into unforeseeable trouble. Good luck.
Club Membership
The Tumble Creek Club is actively seeking members on all levels. Those interested should call (800) 667-1828.
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