- Edited
sdandrea1 I'm not retired, but because we are fortunate enough to have more than a half-dozen municipal courses and at least another dozen privately owned public access courses in the Memphis area this little course gets overlooked and you can stop in and play almost any time without calling ahead. Not so at the other courses, but there are enough of them that the play gets spread out and there aren't too many tournaments on any given course during the year. That little nine hole course has issues in that the longest of the four par 3 holes is only 138 yards, the greens are tiny and fairly coarse bermuda, and a lot of people hate the secondary rough, which is allowed to grow to 5 inches or more. Besides trees, the rough is the only protection the course has, but I think it is allowed to grow as much to save on maintenance costs as it is strategic. Our group usually loses a handful of balls in the rough even though we know, within a few yards, where the ball is. But it is in a good location for us to meet after work and can't beat the price.