PRESS RELEASES
- Golf in a Kingdom Turns Out In Force At Asian Golf Travel Conference
- Golf In A Kingdom Adds New Resort Members
- Black Mountain Par-3 Course Opens
- Thailand Wins Another Golf Tourism Award
- Black Mountain Named Best Golf Course in Thailand
- Golf In A Kingdom Members Scoop Thailand Golf Awards
- Golf Tourism Shows Its Resilience
- Anantara Riverside Resort & Spa to Open in Bangkok
- Hilton Phuket Arcadia to Open Refurbished Wing
- Thai Country Club Links with Overseas Golf Clubs
- Thailand Golf Tourism Heads Towards $US2 Billion
- The St. Regis Bangkok Joins Golf in a Kingdom
- Thailand a New Focus for Hawaiian Golfers
- 15 Year Old Teenage Holidaymaker Wins Major Thai Golf Tournament
- Survey by Tourism Authority of Thailand Promotes Golf Destinations
- Amateurs to Experience Playing on Real Team Championship
- The Late Great Seve Ballesteros Created the Royal Trophy
- Matteo Manessero Loves Asia!
- Major Golf Promotion Kicks Off in Thailand
- TAT Steps Up Promotions for Golf in a Kingdom
- Golf in Thailand Offers the Best Value by 29 Percent
- Thailand Island has Record Arrivals!
- Tinidee Lodge Now Serving Golf Crowd on Phuket
- Thais Land Trophies, Tiger and Tributes
- Red Mountain, Loch Palm, Riverdale join Golf in a Kingdom
- Hilton Hotels Joins Thai Golf Consortium
- Fenix joins Golf in a Kingdom; both on the rise
- Golf Styles Thailand - The Good Life
- Black Mountain Joins Golf in a Kingdom
- Thailand Named "Golf Destination of the Year" for Asia
- Thailand Extends Royal Invitation to Golfers Worldwide
- 'Golf in a Kingdom' adds Woodlands properties in Pattaya
- Thai courses debate viability of price cuts
- 'Golf in a Kingdom' makes 'Unique' addition
- 'Golf in a Kingdom: The Thailand Golf Experience' Offers Golfers in the U.S. & Canada First-Class Thailand Golf Courses and Resorts
- Chiangmai Highlands Pro Am Championship
IN THE NEWS
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Black Mountain Par-3 Course Opens

- Black Mountain Par 3 Hole 1
Hua Hin, Thailand, December 12 - Whatever you have seen, heard or think about par-3 golf courses, it's time to reconsider.
Long ridiculed as an undignified version of the game suited only to children and novices, acclaimed US golf writer Joe Passov wrote earlier this year that serious golfers often regard par-3 courses, undeservedly, as "the red-headed stepchild of golf layouts".
Now, a new nine-hole par-3 layout in Thailand, at the country's official best golf course - Black Mountain at Hua Hin, 200 kilometres south of Bangkok - seems set to change attitudes in Asia about the short version of the 500-year-old game.
Like its big brother layout named last month as the best in Thailand and best championship course in Asia Pacific, Black Mountain's new par-3 course, which opens officially this week, is winning plaudits from the outset.
European pros Johan Edfors, Pelle Edberg and Alex Noren raved about the layout when they test-drove (or, more correctly, test-ironed) it last week.
Deep and plentiful bunkering, water on almost every hole, greens protected by steep banks, and undulations everywhere make the course a far cry from the pitch-and-putt image of par-3 courses - and a challenge even for tour pros.
"It's awesome, the best par-3 course I have played … the world's best driving range," remarked triple European Tour winner, Alex Noren. "It compares more than favourably to Valderama's par-3 course in Spain."
"You could take every hole, put it on a championship layout and it would fit fine," said Johan Edfors, a seven-times winner on three tours and who finished 19th at this year's US Open and 16th at last weekend’s Dubai World Championships. "It's a great course to sharpen up short and mid irons and the greens are big enough to hit. For me, I can learn more in an hour playing one round here than from a day on the range."
"There's a real place for this type of course," said Pelle Edberg, who had his best year ever in 2011 on the US Challenge Tour. "Having the same grass [paspalum fairways and tiff eagle greens] as other top courses in Asia is important for practice. Apart from that, it's a real test and a lot of fun."
Black Mountain's members, who have been playing the course for the past few weeks, agree.
"Members with handicaps of 20 or more have really enjoyed it," says Black Mountain general manager, Harald Ellison. "It's not a course for beginners, but appeals to low, middle and even higher handicappers who want to test their skills on a spectacular layout with challenging holes."
Designer Phil Ryan of Pacific Coast Design in Melbourne, Australia, who also designed Black Mountain's 18-hole course that opened in 2007, has cleverly used a natural valley, with a meandering stone-walled watercourse running through the centre of the course to build the nine holes. On either side of the water are holes of 125 yards to 175 yards from the back tees, or as little as 85 yards from the front tee boxes.
By using different tees for some holes, tee-to-green shots of more than 200 yards are possible. And there will even be a tee on the clubhouse roof for novelty events.
Richard Halls, a partner in construction company Links Golf Services, which built the course as well as Black Mountain's 18-hole layout, says it has the potential to be regarded among the world's best, along with acclaimed par-3 courses like Cloud Nine in Las Vegas, Nevada.
And what of the course itself? It starts gently enough with a hole playing between 130 and 160 yards protected by front bunkers. Water comes in to play at the second hole, also 160 yards from the blacks, while the third with a 75-yard green that is a scale shape of Sweden can be especially tough if the pin is placed at front right near the water or back left on a steep slope.
Three of the last four holes are the toughest. The sixth, the longest hole at 175 yards from the blacks, can be played as long as 200 yards if the tee box is moved to the back of the adjoining fifth tee. The green is perched high above walls made of wooden railway sleepers.
It is likely to be Index One on the card, ranking with the ninth hole as the toughest. The latter, playing from just 90 to 140 yards, requires the most accurate tee shot of all.
Two pot bunkers protect the green left and right, while any missed shot long or right will end up in the water.
Green fees for the par-3 course will be 500 baht (approx. $US16) for nine holes and 750 baht (approx. $US25) for two rounds. A combined rate for the nine-hole and 18-hole courses may also be introduced.
The par-3 addition is one of several new developments at Black Mountain, situated within easy reach of the popular seaside resort city of Hua Hin. This month, Black Mountain will open a water park and wakeboard park that will be among the best in Asia, while the first 15 of 57 new villas adjacent to the par-3 course will open before New Year.
"We are creating a complete community with golf, condominiums villas, water activities, tennis and other sports," Harald Ellison explains. "It means that Black Mountain is becoming a tourism destination in its own right."
Black Mountain was named as best course in Thailand and best championship layout in Asia Pacific at the Pattaya golf summit in November. In 2010, it was selected by Asian Tour players as their favourite host venue of the year.
The club is a member of Thailand's prestigious golf destination marketing program Golf In A Kingdom (www.golfinakingdom.com) that includes the kingdom's top golf courses, resorts and hotels.
For more information about Black Mountain, visit www.bmghuahin.com
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For more information, contact:
Paul Myers, Asian Travel Media, Bangkok
Email: paul(at)asiantravelmedia(dot)com
Tel: +66 (0) 84 125 1894 (Thailand) or +61 407 738 453 (Australia)

