Breezy Point Resort is forging ahead of its
best golf competition in the Brainerd lakes area with a major improvement project at its
Whitebirch Golf Course, according to Resort General Manager Dave Gravdahl.The
6,700-yard facility known for its large and fast greens was the first
championship course constructed in the lakes area and is just around the corner from the
new Palmer-designed Deacons Lodge, the talk of the nations golf community
which will open in 1999.
Deacons Lodge project manager, Pete Loyd, worked closely with Breezy Point to
design and install a system of giant waste bunkers some cover more than an acre of
ground at the Whitebirch course. The additions will significantly toughen play
along Whitebirchs long fairways and oversized greens.
As golfers know, waste bunkers are the "death traps" of some of the
toughest courses in the world. They are rough areas off the fairway and approaches to the
greens that are filled with sand, bushes, long grasses and maybe a log or two. They
are bounded by bunker mounds, often several yards high, and are never raked by the player
who is allowed to ground the club.
"The waste bunkers also will give the course a more natural look in keeping with
its northern Minnesota location," Gravdahl says.
Loyd also lengthened many of Whitebirchs tee boxes and a couple of its fairways,
and he added truckloads of trees for some of the long par-4s.
"Twenty years ago, all you had to do was cut the fairways and water the
greens," says Gravdahl, who has overseen Breezy Points emergence as one of the
premier meeting and golf destinations in Minnesota. "Todays golfers, however,
want a better experience, with a chance to score well on a championship course.
"We opened Whitebirch in 1981 when championship play Up North was unheard
of," Gravdahl says. "The bunker project -- after many earlier improvements -- is
the frosting, and it helps us keep up with the Big Boys in the Brainerd lakes area."
Whitebirch is also known for its Antlers clubhouse, a regional landmark in design and
landscaping. The bunker project began at the close of the summer season and was completed
a few weeks later.
With 22 new bunkers on 11 of Whitebirchs holes, the course will play much
differently in 1999, Gravdahl says.
"Youll have to drive your ball straight and true, all the shortcuts have
been cut off. And if you over-hit a green, youll have to come out of hard sand and
tall weeds," he says. "The premium will be on accuracy rather than on distance.
Itll feel a little like Scotland."
In other golf developments, Breezy Point helped initiate the new statewide golf
marketing campaign announced recently by the Minnesota Golf Association, the Department of
Tourism and a group of some of the states most important courses. The public-private
partnership will push Minnesota as an international golf destination, similar to Myrtle
Beach.