
Debuting in
1975, the Port Ludlow Golf Resort was the first of the
high-end daily fee courses built in Western Washington, and it
remains one of few that is part of a complete salt water
resort including a small inn and on-site
marina. But to
golfers, all the amenities are secondary. It is the
beautiful, but challenging, Robert Muir Graves designed course
that is the attraction.
Port Ludlow's
setting is incredible, always near the Puget Sound bay for
which it is named, the course rocks and rolls through snug,
tree-lined fairways. Like many Kitsap and Olympic peninsula courses,
Port Ludlow is cut through dense second-growth forest, however
in this case, Graves left many of the huge stumps remaining
from the old growth forest in place -- both as
occasional hazards and as reminders of the wild and wooly
logging days gone by. Indeed, those days are a big part
of history of the town of Port Ludlow and other nearby
communities, like quaint, scenic Port Townsend.
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