
"I am very excited and proud to be playing out
of Taboo. Both the course and the region are just magnificent.
The course itself offers players of all levels a lot of options,
and is one of the best and most beautiful courses I have played.
I just love it here." Mike Weir.
Official
Website of Mike Weir (link)
Mike
Weir Miracle Golf Drive for Kids (link)
Mike
Weir’s Hole by Hole Commentary of Taboo
First
Hole The big tree down the left hand side
is a great target. It's a dogleg to the right; it's framed
very nicely even though it is difficult to see the ball land
because you have to turn around the corner. For the average
player, the big tree is a great aiming spot and then moves
into a well-bunkered green right out of the gate. I love the
way the first bunker is sodded right up a bank. It reminds
me of the British Open. The contour off the front, with the
front pin positioned as it slopes off is a good, challenging
pin. There is a unique aspect again to the front, middle part
of the green. On the right hand side you don't need to fly
the ball all the way to the hole, you can use the run-up area,
which for the average player may be hitting a long iron or
perhaps a fairway wood into the hole. You can play a run-up
shot without getting into a bunker on the right hand side.
That's pretty unique.
Second
Hole The second hole is a great hole. The
tee shot is very demanding. With the tree hanging out off
the left hand side, you really have to work the ball right
to left. You can work the shot off of the bunker on the right
hand side of the fairway - it's a nice target. As a pro, I
have to hit a little right to left fade and then your left
with a medium length shot. An amateur would hit a longer shot.
if you play the back tees into a pretty nice receptive green.
The front of the green again gives you options, which I really
like. You can play a run shot into the green or you could
fly in onto the tier you want on the green. I like golf courses
that give you options and the first two holes give you those
options into the greens. Aesthetically, the tee shot on number
two is pleasing. It makes you stand up there and want to hit
the tee shot, it's the best way I can describe it. The view
of it, the shape of the hole, the contour of the fairway and
the criss-cross cut of the fairway looks beautiful. The second
hole is just an all-around great hole.
Third
Hole This is a beautiful par three, a little
bit downhill from the back tee. It's probably close to 200
yards to the center of the green. A waste area in front lined
with rocks and little mounds of grass give a great contrast
and fools with your depth perception a little bit. I noticed
that the first shot I hit looks much further than where I
first thought (it landed); you really have to trust your yardage
on this hole. Ron did a really great job. The architect's
job is to try to create illusions that fool the player's eye
and that is exactly what the third hole does. It looks like
the wind will swirl around a little bit through these trees,
which will make the shot a little more difficult as well.
Another great waste bunker right in front. Your bail out area
is to the left where the amateurs can still play the hole
and make a par from the left side of the front part of the
green, and chip the ball up and down. Great little par three.
Now that I have seen the green off the back right it gives
you a great little pitching area. Difficult little up and
downs, but again, it gives you options. You can flop the ball
or play a bump and run. The back part of the green is generous
enough that the average amateur can play those types of shots
and still maybe get the ball up and down for par. The tee
boxes here also give you many different angles - so you are
looking at the green differently from the many tee boxes.
This can give you many different perspectives of the hole,
which is also unique to this course.
Fourth
Hole The par five No. 4 requires another
pretty good tee shot. . For me to get to the green in two
I have to hit in quite a bit up the right or these trees on
the left will really block your second shot out. The average
amateur will have to make a decision as whether you hit a
big enough drive, whether to challenge the rocks and go over,
or to lay it short. Another really unique aspect is this magnificent
granite coming right across the middle of the fairway. I have
never seen anything like that, and I think that sets Taboo
apart from other courses. It is really cool. The real challenge
comes on this fourth hole. Again, your decision is to either
try to go over these rocks or lay up in between the two bunkers
short of the rocks. Then you're left to play a little uphill
third shot to a pretty elevated green if you lay up short,
but you can't really see the contours. It's a pretty difficult
par five, but a very good one.
Fifth
Hole This fifth hole has the most picturesque
tee shots so far, with the lake to the left of the bunkers
framing the hole. Just a beautiful tee shot here. You have
to thread through the bunkers. From the up tees, amateurs
might have to lay up short of the water but then play a very
difficult shot into the green. But once again, it gives you
options. You can run the ball up to the green or you can try
to fly it on the green with a big bunker looming left. The
trees behind it frame the hole really nicely and you can pick
out a good target on one of the trees behind the green. The
bunkers off the tee are challenging; it's very important to
hit the fairway even if you have to be short of the bunkers
off the tee. If you get into these bunkers it is going to
make for a long hole.
Sixth
Hole The sixth is another great tee shot-
very visual - giving you a lot of options. Shorter hitters
can play it up the left hand side; longer hitters can cut
the corner a little bit. Some rocks, trees and water come
into play on the right side. Your second shot is coming over
a small little pond into a pretty undulating green that slopes
right to left up the front. If you hit a good tee shot, you
can maybe take advantage of a short second shot with a short
iron into the green where you can possibly make a birdie.
The tee shot is what makes this hole beautiful - but fairways
get hard in the summertime. It may not be a driver because
it runs downhill and can run through the fairway.
Seventh
Hole The seventh is an unbelievable par
three. Amateurs can run a shot in from about three yards short
of the green. They can play a bump and run because it is open
to the front, but of either side, the right side is a little
more forgiving. The rocks are in the way a little bit on the
right, but the left side is really difficult with two very,
very deep pot bunkers that will probably gobble up some balls
because it is sloped right in to the bunkers. It is a fairly
forgiving green, but considering the length of the hole you
need that because it is very demanding. Basically, if you
hit a good shot right up the centre, you'll get on the green
- otherwise it's a very demanding par three.
Eighth
Hole Another nice tee shot framed very well
with the bunker on the right, a good spot to aim at. Although
there are mature birch trees that line both sides of the fairway,
you want to hit to the left side where you have a lot of targets
to aim at with the bunker and the birch trees. The fairway
starts and slopes right to left. This is a good design feature
for this hole; it's the way the hole should be set up with
nothing unusual there. It's just pure golf out here! The fairways
are forgiving if you hit good tee shots but penalizing if
you miss it. It's nice for me to see bent grass. I've played
a lot on the west coast, in Bermuda, at college and professionally,
so I really appreciate a pure Ontario course with bent grass
and lots of mature trees. These are absolutely distinct aspects
of Ontario golf.
Ninth
Hole This hole is tough. It is a long uphill
into the prevailing winds, and you have to shape the hole
left to right off the tee. The average amateur is going to
have a tough time here. If you don't carry it far enough you
may not be able to get around the corner far enough to see
the green, but if you hit a strong tee shot in the summer
when the fairways are running you can get it out there. Once
again I would like to note the playability of this course
- at the approach shot you can again choose your option. Since
there is no bunker right in the front, you can play a run-up
shot or you can try to fly in on the green. The left pot bunker
looked very neat - you want to stay away from that!
Tenth
Hole The tenth hole has a nice elevation
on the tee. It drops down with the left bunkers off the tee
making for another good aiming point. The big birch that is
situated right in the center of the green that shapes up like
a v is a great aiming spot as well. Again, you must stay away
from the left front bunker. The right hand side has trees
but then into a difficult green, especially the back left
where you have the front left sloping off the front. If you
don't carry it enough on the left it will roll back off the
front. You can run it on the front part of the green; it gives
you that option again, though it is a little bit more of a
narrow green. The right side is very narrow, and so is the
back left, even though if you hit a good drive you have a
shorter iron in. Still you have to be pretty precise with
that club to get it close to the hole. Very good hole! I have
a great feel about this place - great transition into the
back nine. Great visuals at this golf course as well. I like
golf courses that have a lot of targets. You can stand up
there and get something very distracting and this course does
that.
Driving
Range Just a note or two about the driving
range, it has a lot of targets at the hitting area to practice
your wedge game. You have two tees, the back tier so you can
play at different wind directions, fairway bunkers, green
bunkers and lots of greens to putt and chip around. It is
a complete practice facility. You can find whatever you want
out there, and work on whatever part of your game you want.
They have really left no stone unturned in the practice facility.
Twelfth
Hole Downhill tee shot with good position
off the tee and leaves you a nice little intimidating shot
over a waste marsh area with a big pot bunker staring back
at you.. There is a back bank behind the green, which is nice
if you do get a little long, the ball won't scoot into the
trees. It'll just hit into the hill and stop a little bit.
It's a great little hole. It is a generous fairway; you just
want to make sure you lay up short of the hazard because this
hole is all about the second shot. Watch your distance control,
but overall, it's a really neat little hole with beautiful
rock outcroppings out in front. Really cool.
Thirteenth
Hole This is a great looking hole. With
the rocks all down the right hand side, rock cropping, bridge
on the left with a huge rock right behind the green, it really
frames the hole. It's awesome with these pot bunkers on the
front right. It really has a British Open look to it. Not
a long hole, but the tee shot is really important to be between
the rock on the right and the bunker on the left. It is just
a beautiful and fun hole. If you hit a good tee shot you can
make a birdie, but with the granite and those pot bunkers,
there is some trouble out there as well. It is just a beautiful
hole to look at with all the natural granite around. You are
constantly reminded that this is a course that was designed
around the natural aspects of the region - the Canadian Shield.
Beautiful. The green is pretty receptive. I like the way the
left hill banks and funnels back into the middle of the green.
It slopes off at the front and the back of the green is pretty
difficult. It slopes back to front pretty well and is just
a great hole.
Fourteenth
Hole Another good tee shot you have to fit
between the bunkers. I think the outstanding feature on this
hole is all the rocks down the left hand side. The green really
looks at you and you can see all the contours. Nice visual
into the green. Back left looks like it will probably be the
tougher shot. If you miss it left, there you are, kind of
down in that bunker, or you are going to be on a side slope,
a difficult hole there. I like how Ron has opened up all the
front of the green. I love the playability in that you can
really be creative in deciding whether to play a bump shot
into the front off the green, or fly one in there. He has
really left that option open which I really like. I also like
that there is trouble around the edges of the greens with
the bunkers. Because they are not right in front of the green,
it does allow for a number of different types of shots that
you can play into the green.
Fifteenth
Hole Great little par three here for about
180 yards. It is well framed by the back bunkers and the front
part of the green has a very deep penalizing layered bunker
on the left and another one on the front right. A difficult
green too, as you go along it slopes away from you. Beware;
there are some tricky slopes in there.
Sixteenth
Hole Great par five here. There is a big
beautiful tree that you aim your tee shot off. Most amateurs
would just aim straight at it and keep it up the right side
away from the left hand bunker and the big rock just left
of it. You are going to lay up because there is a little pot
bunker in the fairway. It is a cool aspect of this hole. The
amateurs are going to have to play around. You can leave yourself
a medium range fairway wood or a long iron into the green.
It is just a beautifully shaped hole, right through the trees
again. This golf course is just absolutely beautiful. You
have the rocks and the trees, just the general layout of the
land, the way the bunkers are- it is unique. That is also
what is unique about Muskoka, the rocks and the different
types of holes that you can create out here. The second shot
into that green is very rewarding. It has a lot of run up
area in the front, and lots of chipping area around the greens
that you can pitch in from. It is a hole that an amateur can
make a birdie on if they hit a couple of good shots.
Seventeenth
Hole Another good tee shot here on seventeen.
You just want to get up and rip it because it's downhill,
has great visuals and great targets to aim at on the right
side of the rocks just beyond the big tree. The average amateur
can aim it just at the base of the tree and try to keep it
away from the bunker. You're left with an elevated tee shot
with the rocks down the left side. The shape of the bunkers
makes this a beautiful hole. Really well done.
Eighteenth
Hole Coming up and over the ridge after
your tee shot is really nice. It'll be tough off this down
slope. Really demanding second shot in there- you have to
curve around both ways but you have options. Alternatively
you can lay it up over the first rock. You really get a sense
for this hole when you look back down the fairway when you
are up close to the green. You see how the rock is and how
the contour is around here. It's a little like playing the
big island of Hawaii with some of the lava flowing through
the golf courses that you have to play around. Although it
is similar, this is such distinctive rock. Beautiful natural
granite follows you around this course. The thing I really
love about Taboo is you really have to drive it well, and
then you can be creative on your second shots and play a bunch
of different types of shots into the greens. I think that
is the real strength of this golf course - it's flexibility
and appeal for all types of golfers.
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