$105,000Resort memberships sales rose 160 percent over the year to 50 in 2020, according to Bluejack National. Members pay $105,000 to join and annual dues of $15,000.
The Mitchell Family With five children, Kristin and Andy Mitchell's passionate commitment is to create and curate the ultimate Bluejack experience for residents, members and guests to pass the test of time.
Bluejack National in Montgomery, Texas is a private course. For details on tee time availability, contact the course directly, or explore availability at nearby courses.
Bluejack is home to the first golf course in the United States designed by Tiger Woods.
550 membershipsBluejack National has a modest housing element (386 total units and 550 memberships). But the only homes that border the golf course are on the perimeter and there will be a pretty significant buffer of pine trees.
Blaketree National Golf ClubBluejack National traces its roots back from the mid-1980's when Thomas Blake developed Blaketree National Golf Club to 2014 when a defunct golf course and surrounding parcels of land had life breathed back into it by those who saw the intrinsic value.
Jack's Bay – A New Private Club & Community in Rock Sound (Rock Sound, Bahamas) August 28, 2020 – Tiger Woods and Jack's Bay Company, developers of the new Jack's Bay private club and community in Rock Sound, Eleuthera, Bahamas, opened The Playground, a spectacular 10-hole, par-3 golf course created by Woods' TGR ...
: an oak (Quercus cinerea) of the southern U.S. with entire cuneate leaves and numerous small acorns.
Good Good Golf, a company founded by Garrett Clark, Matt Scharff, Stephen Castaneda, Micah 'Tig' Morris, and Tom 'Bubbie' Broders has become a national icon for the golf industry.
Members and their guests only. Brett Schoenfield. Tiger Woods, Beau Welling. Aaron Crooks. The 18-hole layout at Bluejack National is the first headline design to open in the United States for Tiger Woods and architect Beau Welling. Situated an hour’s drive north of Houston city centre, the course is the centrepiece of an upmarket real estate ...
Bluejack is Tiger Woods' first design in the USA and his second design worldwide (first being El Cardonal at Diamante in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico). The full 18 holes opened in April 2016, so not on any Top 100 yet.
Down the left side is a trio of bunkers with them spaced at 240-270-300 yards from the back tee. If one can carry the final bunker, they will have a gap/sand wedge to the green. However, I saw no reason for longer hitters to take on the final bunker given the expanse of the fairway to the right.
Tiger created a course in Texas that feels like Augusta met North Carolina. The rolling terrain, towering pines, and wide playing corridors make for a tremendous layout. Bluejack is the epitome of the new era of golf course design; it is playable for anyone and gives you options on every hole. My favorite hole is the 8th, a short par-4 that tempts you to drive the green. This track gives Whispering Pines a run for the best place to play in the state.#N#January 09, 2020
There is a bunker about 25 yards short of the green placed on the left side to provide doubt for those trying to get to the green in two as this is the best line to the green. The green is long and narrow with a middle swale and the back half going from the player. There is a substantial fall-off on the right side.
Some believe that other than perhaps playing Peachtree or Sage Valley, it is the closest they might ever get to playing Augusta National due to the very generous fairways, land movement, incorporation of water, the lack of rough, scattered trees, and bright white sand in the large bunkers.
There are also a few weaker holes at Bluejack which fits into perfectly to the intent of the course – take a breath, have fun, and enjoy the walk. This is a course where you are going to have fun. The goal here is for stress-free golf from the tee shot to the green.
The most photographed hole at Bluejack is the downhill par-3 12th, which bears a striking resemblance to the twelfth at Augusta National, sans the front bunker. The shot plays a club downhill, and any flag right of middle tests a player’s nerve. The bailout option is left, leaving a lengthy putt, or if long, a dicey bunker shot staring back at the lake.
Everyone loves a great short par-4, and Woods gives us two great ones at Bluejack. The first is the quasi volcano green 8th. The hole begs you to go for the green, but the tall pines obstruct the ideal left-to-right ball flight that the hole calls for. The green is long and narrow, and a perfect drive is rewarded with a great eagle chance. However, anything just short or right will funnel into a collection area that is some 40’ below the green. Any shot too far left will find a small swale that leaves a treacherous chip shot with a deep collection area to the right looming.
The bunker is a 265-yard carry and rewards the brave with a short approach to the bunkerless green. The second shot plays downhill to a green that was seemingly laid on the land’s natural contours.
At first glance, Bluejack’s aesthetic appearance often gets compared to Augusta because of the towering pines, wide fairways and white sand bunkers with sharp edges. The second hole surely fits the bill as it looks and feels like it belongs at Augusta National.
Width. The 11th features a nearly 100-yard wide fairway that slopes significantly from right to left. This hole is everyone’s chance to let the big dog eat. A long drive can yield a chance to go for the downhill par-5’s long and narrow green in two. The green has a very steep fall-off on the left side, and any shot that is slightly too hot will find the right bunker, which leaves a tough sand shot to a green sloping away. A perfect attempt to go for it in two is rewarded with a chance at eagle or birdie, and any not quite up to snuff will have to scramble to make five.
Fun: The endless options on and around the greens, the drivable par-4s and reachable par-5s, the wide fairways and the off-the-course amen ities make Bluejack a place where you want to spend a lot of time. It’s pure fun.