A guide to green fee value for money

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138. Cupar. 18 May 22.

Don’t get confused by historic rhetoric – you play the course, not the ‘club’.

Round £16. Par 33. Course Rating / Slope Rating (yellow) 31.9/114. Value (out of 5) – 3.5

Cupar is a quaint 9 hole course in the town of the same name, only 10 miles to the west of St Andrews.

The web site and a sign at the first hole declare you’re playing at “the oldest 9 hole golf club in the world”. Dig just a little under the surface and you realise this is just a trifle disingenuous.

The delightful and fun sign on near the first at Cupar.

Firstly, you play on a golf course, not on a golf club. So whilst Cupar Golf Club was founded in 1855, it was at a 6 hole course (note not 9) some distance from the current location, which is in the Hilltarvit area of Cupar.

The green at the short 6th, which plays much longer that the yardage, perhaps 3 clubs longer. Try and look closely you’ll note the greens could have been better.

After an interesting first 40 years of existence, during which the Cupar Golf Club located and played at Ladybank golf course, this current 9 hole layout which plays across the slope of Tarvit Hill was laid out in 1896, after a few years of a more “up and down” layout.

Moly at the 255 yard par 4 third hole from the well prepared teeing ground

Do some research and you uncover there are a number of 9 hole courses still in play from the early 1890s, with nearby Anstruther (click for my blog), being a good example.

Set aside the longevity, and you do have a delightful little fun course to play, along with its nice wooden clubhouse.

The tricky surrounds of the green at the 7th, a par 4 of 344 yards.

The course was in pretty good condition, although the greens were soft in places and many pitch marks had not been repaired, which was a shame.

Fran at the 8th, with long reaching views and showing the sloping fairways that await you at Cupar.

Although set on a hill, with great views over the town and surrounding countryside, many of the holes played across the slopes so it was a much easier walk that we had envisioned.

The last hole!

I played very well, in blustery conditions, for a 41, 7 over, which was about to handicap for the 9 holes. I drove to 4 feet at the last (see photo above) but missed my birdie putt.

It’s well worth playing Cupar, but don’t buy any of the “oldest” stuff, is my steer. But don’t take my word for it – check out the nice history overview on the web site here and make your own mind up.

Cupar GC allow bookings direct on their BRS system, where I got a decent discount and paid only £13 for 9 holes. Good value.

Lastly, don’t put Hill of Tarvit into your sat nav, as you’ll end up a few miles south at Kingarrock Hickory golf course, another place well worth a visit.

Course Type: Parkland

Par 33 (0 par 5s, 6 par 4s, 3 par 3s)

Distance: 2376 (white)

Moly’s Gross score41

Moly’s Cupar 9 hole scorecard – 41, net 34, 1 over par. A good day in blustery conditions.

135. Bellshill. 28 Mar 22.

A great lesson in the use of internal OOB at this excellent course, built on a key social history site

Round £25. Par 69. Course Rating / Slope Rating (yellow) 68.3/120. Value (out of 5) – 4.5

I really liked playing Bellshill. Set in lovely parkland alongside Strathclyde Country Park, it is a popular venue for golfing societies given its central and easily accessed location. Founded in 1905, with 9 holes, and later extended to 18, it has an excellent history documented here by one of its former captains Alexander Gardner; it doesn’t record the course designer.

The quality is clear right at the start at Bellshill – here the long par four (449 yards) opening hole.

Look deeper into the course’s history and you uncover a remarkable story of societal development, that I suspect the vast majority of local golfers know nothing about.

It’s very fitting you enter the golf course through a humble, working class area. Go back 200 years and you would be sited on the Orbiston Community, set up by ‘Owenites’, the followers of the Welsh social reformer, Robert Owen (1771-1858). It was a community of ‘co-operation and equality and to social provisions, such as education and welfare’. Robert married a local Scottish woman, hence his association to Lanarkshire. Like many ‘utopian’ projects, it didn’t last forever, albeit the par three 8th hole is still called “Orbiston”.

Moly about to drive at the mid length 12th hole – the 351 yard par four, stroke index 6 hole. Beware the tree in the fairway at about 220 yards, just visible here.

The course has 9 holes either side of a main railway line, with the first five and last four being on the side of the clubhouse. There is excellent signage to navigate between holes and either side of the line.

If you look at the first hole and the last 4 holes, you get a sense that it was an experienced course architect who first laid out Bellshill. Variety, undulations, appropriate bunkering and good green surrounds are testament to the quality of the designer.

The brilliant short par four 6th hole. Both “easy” and a “potential nightmare”

There are some memorable holes, in my book most notably the sixth. A short par four of only 292 yards, from both white and yellow tees, it has a blind tee shot over a slight brow about 140 yards from the tee. With a green fronted bunker and a front to back sloping green, it is impossible to drive. I was very lucky to unknowingly hit driver, which came up just short of the bunker. With a front pin, it was then impossible to get close to. Somewhat lucky to get a par 4, I preceded to have an interesting conversation with a greenkeeper on the next hole. He said many members don’t like the 6th hole, but the more experienced golfers, “just hit two short irons hoping for a single putt”. Alternatively, with a good bunker game, a shot into the front green bunker is also an option. A good example of a short hole giving good options, at all levels.

Many courses can learn from Bellshill’s good use of an internal OOBs, here shown at the 4th hole where OOB is on the right of the hole.


The course had very few fairway bunkers, but that was compensated by many undulating greens, some very difficult. The good finish, from holes 15 to 18, includes some card wreckers, most notably the stoke index 4, 16th par four. The 18th, with OOB right, is also a difficult green to hit in two.

The 8th hole “Orbiston”, a tough par 3, named after the community founded by Robert Owen the 18th Century social reformer.

I had a solid game, scoring 88, or net 74, 5 over par. Any time over 30 points on a new course, I’m very satisfied. The condition of the course was superb when I played. At an annual membership just under £600, it represents a great value course to play on regularly amongst the many available in this urban area of Central Scotland.

The difficult par three 17th hole, ‘Babylon’, part of the very fine last four hole stretch at Bellshill.

I had a great and welcoming conversation with two local members in the changing rooms and did indeed get a feeling of ‘community’ which somehow felt right. They told me a great many members volunteer to maintain the course in such good condition. I was let wondering if they knew how fitting that was and how proud Robert Owen might have felt at that feeling of community.

Course Type: Parkland

Par 69 (0 par 5s, 15 par 4s, 3 par 3s)

Distance: 5818 (yellow)

Moly’s Gross score88

Moly’s 88 at Bellshill – a solid golfing day.

134. Fereneze. 27 Mar 22.

What a great surprise to find this course, so close to Glasgow

Round £30. Par 71. Course Rating / Slope Rating (yellow) 67.7/123. Value (out of 5) – 4.5

“Go and play Fer-En-Eeze”, said the helpful professional at Gailes Links in Irvine, when I told him my mission of playing all golf courses. “I’m talking about Scottish golf courses”, said I, thinking his suggestion sounded more Italian than Scottish. “It’s in Barrhead” he said. That, of course, didn’t make it any easier to understand the name.

The first, but by no means the last, magnificent view towards Glasgow. Here at the second, looking back towards the tee. A difficult short hole at 140 yards, playing at least 1-2 clubs longer.

Fereneze has been, to date, the most wonderful surprise of courses I’ve played. A quite remarkable heathland setting with exceptional views over Glasgow and the Clyde valley. Set only a few hundred feet above the tough town of Barrhead, a place more known for products most peed on by UK residents – i.e. Armitage Shanks porcelain!

The start of the moorland holes, the par five third, is also the most difficult hole at Fereneze. Keep your drive left to avoid finding the gorse at this left to right sloping hole (bottom right quadrant highlights).

The ‘rough’ town claim is well justified; when searching for information on Fereneze Golf Club you keep finding stories like local youths setting fire to the heathland or the greenkeepers spending much of their time cleaning up the cans and bottles from heathland parties. None of that, however, should put you off playing at Fereneze, which provides excellent value.

The lovely par three 7th at Fereneze at 148 yards.

As to the the origin of Fereneze golf club, little is really documented other than on its crest showing it was established in 1904. The club sadly no longer operates a web site. The course is situated on The Fereneze Hills and the origin of the name is reportedly from a Gaelic name “Fernieneese” as it is spelled in some old records—meaning, fern, or alder [reference: A History of the Parish of Neilston].

The drivable par four 9th at Fereneze, where Moly 4 putted from just off the front of the green….ouch!

Back to the golf course. The Gailes Links professional, was spot on. Fereneze is well worth a visit. After a severely uphill par four opening hole, followed by a tricky par three, your walk to the third tee leaves you in no doubt what you are then facing. A magnificent piece of moorland; dry fairways, gorse and broom in abundance. Thankfully, I played on an exceptionally dry and unseasonably warm March day. I can imagine this being a windswept landscape that takes no golfing prisoners.

A more successful hole for Moly, here just missing a birdie at the 320 yard par four 11th hole.

The course is a par 71, but relatively short at 5676 yards. Most of the variety is in the front nine, with the back nine having only one par three (the 14th) and the rest being par fours. That makes for a fairly imbalanced layout; with the last few holes being the most disinteresting. But there is still plenty of variety in the use of blind shots and dog legs, to retain your interest. The course was in excellent condition and playing like a June day, not a March one. For example, I nearly reached the green at the par four 9th (300 yards) and actually reached the green at the 377 yard 18th which was both downhill and downwind.

The severely downhill par four 18th hole at Fereneze, Moly 3 putted for par after driving the green. That typified the day really.

The greens were very fast and the sand excellent. Although generous off the tee, finding the rough or gorse tended to mean double bogie. Stay on the fairway, even if that means taking iron from the tees. I shot 92 for 30 stableford points, and felt I played more solidly than my score suggests.

The shop staff were a little cold, and not particularly helpful towards my wife in seeking where the ladies toilets were. It was the only downside of an otherwise memorable golfing day.

Course Type: Heathland

Par 71 (3 par 5s, 11 par 4s, 4 par 3s)

Distance: 5676 (yellow)

Moly’s Gross score90

Moly’s 90 at Fereneze, a course well worth playing.

133. Gogarburn. 25 Mar 22.

This 12 hole course next to Edinburgh airport feels like what you would build if you could afford your own golf course

Round £17.50. Par 70. Course Rating / Slope Rating (yellow) 64.4/111. Value (out of 5) – 5

Gogarburn golf course is located very close to both Edinburgh airport and the headquarters of the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS). RBS was around the year 2000 the “largest bank in the world”, but infamously came tumbling down as part of the 2008 Global Banking Crisis, triggered by the ‘unknown’ amount of sub-prime mortgages held on its books. Iain Martin’s excellent book “Making it Happen: Fred Goodwin, RBS and the Men Who Blew Up the British Economy” exposes the excesses of bankers which contributed to the crisis.

I mention this, because when I played Gogarburn, a quite delightful 12 hole course, it felt like it would be the sort of ‘spending excess’ that Fred Goodwin, the RBS CEO, would have built in his back garden. I was a bit disappointed to find it had never been owned by RBS, but I still strongly suspect that Fred must have tried to buy it at some point, as he was a great lover of golf and used the banks money to sponsor his golfing hero, Jack Nicklaus.

The stunning second hole at Gogarburn, a delightful par 4. Short, at 273 yards, but full of danger.

The golf course sits on the former 18th century Hanley Estate grounds, which had been in use as a hospital since 1948, and was actually created by some local hospital workers for their own leisure in 1977 with 9 holes, then extended in 1983 to the current 12 hole layout. So it wasn’t only bankers that overstepped their work boundaries!

The par four 5th hole at Gogarburn, another hole where an iron or hybrid off the tee makes sense.

The course is laid out in very mature and varied parkland, and has a clever layout, whereby 18 holes are played in competitions by using holes 6 through 8 once, and all the others twice. It would make for a lovely and easy walk for non playing partners.

Its not long, as the slope index would suggest, but it has some narrow channels to drive through, so don’t be fooled otherwise you’ll really rack up some big scores. Take hybrid or irons off the tee, or drive straight.

The pretty green at Gogarburn’s 11th, a good par three of 166 yards

Some of the short par 4s are technically drivable, but are cleverly protected by very narrow green entrances between bunkers. For example, the 259 yard, par four 3rd hole, has only nine yards between the greenside bunkers – although the ‘easiest’ hole, you need to take care. The greenside bunkering, with excellent sand, is one of the good features of this course.

The finishing hole at Gogarburn, the longest hole at 379 yards, and stroke index 1.

My round of 50, 7 over par, was made up of 5 pars and 7 bogies. I played very well and really enjoyed playing this course; not because of my score, but because of the all round condition and layout.

It’s brilliant value, especially at the discounted rate I paid of only £13 using the ClubV1 booking system; it’s still 5 star value at the £17.50 rack rate. A good place to practice your wedge game, but don’t get complacent. Overseas visitors might try and use it to overcome jet lag!

Course Type: Parkland

Par 43 (7 par 4s, 5 par 3s)

Distance: 3031 (yellow)

Moly’s Gross score50

Gogarburn card. Played well for 50, just 7 over gross.

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