Gulmarg Golf Club

The Gulmarg Golf Club is a public golf course in a meadow at Gulmarg in Kashmir, India. The golf course, at an elevation of 2,650 metres (8,690 ft) above sea level, is the highest green golf course in the world.[1][2] It lies 52 kilometres (32 mi) from Srinagar in the west. The golf course gets covered in by a thick layer of snow during the winter. It is open from April to November.[3][4]

Gulmarg Golf Club
Gulmarg Golf Course
Club information
Coordinates34°03′18″N 74°23′30″E
LocationGulmarg,
Kashmir
Established1890
TypePublic
Owned byJKTDC
Operated byJKTDC
Total holes18
Designed byColonel Neville Chamberlain
Par72
Length7,505 yards (6,863 m)

History

Gulmarg, which means the meadow of flowers, is a hill station surrounded by pine and fir. The Gulmarg Golf Course with a 6-hole course was built within a meadow by Colonel Neville Chamberlain in 1890 at Gulmarg, a hill station near Srinagar. In 1922 the first Golf championship was played at the course with the introduction of Nedou's Cup in 1929. The course was later redesigned and turned into the Gulmarg Golf Club by Peter Thomson in 1970. It was developed in a links-style in accordance with its surrounding natural landscape and made more challenging by relocation of the greens. The golf course hosted the Northern India Cup regularly until 1989, when it was shifted to Delhi.[5] In 2011, the golf course was redesigned by Ranjit Nanda a Delhi-based golf-architect. From December to March, the golf course becomes a winter sports center for skiing and snowboarding.[1][3][4][6]

Legacy

The Gulmarg Golf Club, at an elevation of 2,650 metres (8,690 ft) above sea level, is the highest green golf course in the world.[7] It has 16 different species of wildflowers along with the creeping bent on the greens. The 18-hole golf course features the country's longest hole (the 8th, a 610-yard par 5). At 7,505 yards (6,863 m), the Gulmarg Golf Course is the longest golf course in India.[3][4][5]

See also

References

  1. "Golfing in Kashmir". www.jktdc.co.in. Retrieved 2020-10-23.
  2. Rice, Jonathan (1995). Curiosities of golf. Internet Archive. London : Pavilion. ISBN 978-1-85793-671-1.
  3. "the-south-asian Life & Times". www.the-south-asian.com. Retrieved 2020-10-23.
  4. "Gulmarg Golf Club". jktourism.jk.gov.in. Retrieved 2020-10-23.
  5. Lovell-Hoare, Max; Lovell-Hoare, Sophie (2014-07-01). Kashmir: Jammu. Kashmir Valley. Ladakh. Zanskar. Bradt Travel Guides. ISBN 978-1-84162-396-2.
  6. Khanna, A. C. (1971). Hill Resorts of India and Nepal: A Traveller's Guide. Nest & Wings (India).
  7. Stacey, Allan (1988). Visiting Kashmir. Internet Archive. New York : Hippocrene Books. ISBN 978-0-87052-568-1.
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