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Blue Rock Springs Creek has been tested for the toxin diazinon and found to have attained an elevated value of 40.9 micrograms per liter; diazinon is a toxic pesticide associated with golf course maintenance. The 36-hole Blue Rock Springs Golf Course lies in this watershed; although diazinon has been banned for golf course use in the U.S., its ...
Robert Muir "Bob" Graves (September 24, 1930 – June 28, 2003) was an American landscape and golf course architect who was president of the American Society of Golf Course Architects [1] from 1974–75.
At Benbow Lake the South Fork meets its largest tributary, the East Branch South Fork Eel River. The East Branch, formed by the confluence of two small creeks, Cruso Cabin [11] and Elkhorn Creeks, [12] south of Bell Springs Mountain, flows through a rugged, narrow gorge in a generally northwest direction for about 20 miles (32 km). [13]
- Address: 150 Top of the Rock Road, Ridgedale, Missouri. Montana: Whitefish Lake Golf Club ... Crystal Springs Golf Club - Rating: 3/5 (397 reviews) - Address: 1 Wild Turkey Way, Hamburg, New Jersey.
This is a list of golf courses for the design of which American golf course architect A. W. Tillinghast was at least in part responsible. OD denotes courses for which Tillinghast is the original designer
Sulphur Springs Mountain (or Sulfur Springs Mountain) is a mountain in southwestern Solano County, California. The slopes can be accessed via hiking trails emanating from Blue Rock Springs Park in the city of Vallejo. Cinnabar deposits were extracted from this location in the early 1900s at Hastings Mine and St. John's Mine.
The Country Club at Castle Pines (Castle Rock, Colorado) – 1986; The Country Club of Louisiana (Baton Rouge, Louisiana) – 1986; Dallas Athletic Club (Dallas, Texas), Blue course – 1986; St. Mellion Hotel Golf & Country Club (Cornwall, England) – 1986; Valhalla Golf Club (Louisville, Kentucky) – 1986
Devil's Golf Course Detail of a salt-covered rock, Devil's Golf Course The Devil's Golf Course is a large salt pan on the floor of Death Valley. It was named after a line in the 1934 National Park Service guide book to Death Valley National Monument, which stated that "Only the devil could play golf" on its surface, due to a rough texture from ...