Scarecrow at Gamble Sands

by | Oct 21, 2024 | News

Scarecrow at Gamble Sands: Another Masterpiece by David McLay Kidd

Gamble Sands, one of the top golf resorts in the Pacific Northwest, has unveiled the name of its new 18-hole course, designed by David McLay Kidd. Scarecrow will open for public and resort-guest play on Aug. 1, 2025, in Brewster, WA. Tee times are now available on GambleSands.com.

Located near the apple and cherry orchards of the Gebbers’ family farm (owners of Gamble Sands) and overlooking the Columbia River Valley, McLay Kidd and design associate Nick Schaan have transformed a twisted saddle of rolling terrain and river-view ridgeline into the second 18-hole golf course. Golfers will soon find Scarecrow a counterpart yet contrasting experience to Gamble’s original and award-winning Sands course. Scarecrow will play to a par of 71 and stretch to 6,900 yards.

With the property’s original McLay Kidd-designed Sands Course firmly entrenched as a Top 100 golf course in the United States, one may ask, ‘How do you make the new course different while also making it a relative to the first course?’ McLay Kidd and Schaan had the same question. The answer started (and ended) with the land itself.

“This part of the site has higher, peakier spots that were more akin to classic sand-dune, sandhills type blowouts, and we exposed some of those, we preserved some of those,” Schaan said. “The piece of land (for the new course) is just smaller. If you draw a circle around the first course, it sits on 350-500 acres, depending on how you draw it. This new course sits on about 300 acres, and so it’s a lot more compact things are a bit closer together. But the fairways are still wide — in some cases, they are even wider (than the original Sands Course). The whole golf course kind of climbs over this knob, through a saddle, up another knob, through a valley — you see a lot more of the river, hole after hole after hole. And you see a lot more golf that you’re not playing across the site.”

Besides the land, another key difference between Scarecrow and the Sands Course is the size of the greens.

“The greens are smaller,” Schaan said. “Once we got out onto the site and were walking around and looking at the tightness and the steepness of the contours versus the first course’s greens, the greens needed to be smaller to fit into the spaces that made good green sites. There’s still tons of turf around the actual cup-able areas because all the steeper contours that you can’t count as ‘green’ you can still use to roll a ball around. It’s different but the playability is the same (as the Sands Course).”

Extensive views and large sand bunkers on the original course are hallmarks of Gamble Sands. However, McLay Kidd and Schaan took a different approach to bunkering on Scarecrow.

“Gamble Sands has this big, open-expanse sandy character to it — it’s so massive that if we replicated that again in the same fashion, that alone would make the golf courses look similar. But doing that in the steeper terrain becomes cumbersome, so the sand areas are broken into chunks and smaller pieces and compositions of clusters instead of these massive sand areas,” said Schaan.

With two 18-hole McLay Kidd-designed championship courses, a 14-hole McLay Kidd-designed short course, a 100,000 square-foot Cascades Putting Green, multiple food and beverage options, and 40 brand-new double-king luxury rooms opening in the spring of 2025 (for a total of 77 rooms at the Inn), Gamble Sands has solidified itself as a premier golf destination.

Located in central Washington and managed by Troon, the 7,169-yard Sands course at Gamble Sands opened for public play in 2014 among widespread industry acclaim. GOLF Magazine and Golf Digest named it the “Best New” golf course of 2014. It is currently listed among “Golfweek’s Best: Modern Courses, 2023,” is No. 14 on GOLF’s Top 100 Courses You Can Play and No. 30 on Golf Digest’s ranking of America’s 100 Greatest Public Courses. Located in the high desert overlooking the Columbia River with sandy soil, the courses at Gamble Sands are turfed with traditional fine fescue grasses, which provide firm and fast surfaces. In addition to 50 holes of golf, Gamble Sands also offers caddie services, a complete practice facility, a well-equipped golf shop, Danny Boy Bar & Grill, The Barn restaurant, and lodging at The Inn at Gamble Sands, featuring meeting and event space.

Photo Couttesy of Troon

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About the Author

<a href="https://golfonemedia.com/author/steve_pike/" target="_self">Steve Pike</a>

Steve Pike

Steve “Spike” Pike is a lifelong journalist whose career covers Major League Baseball, the NFL, and college basketball. For the past 26 years, Spike has been one of the more respected voices in the golf and travel industries, working for such publications as Golfweek, Golf World, and Golf Digest for The New York Times Magazine Group. In 1998, Spike helped launch the PGA.com website for the PGA of America. As a freelance travel and golf writer, Spike’s travels have taken him around the world. He has played golf from Pebble Beach to St. Andrews, walked the Great Wall of China, climbed an active volcano in the Canary Islands, been on safari in South Africa, and dived with sharks off Guadalupe, Baja California.