Sign In or Start your 14-Day Free Trial!

Sugar Mill Golf Course - Daytona Golf


Sugar Mill - Hole 9 Sugar Mill - Hole 9 The good news is that Sugar Mill, a fine member-owned private 27-hole Joe Lee golf club, is open to the public. The bad news is that it is only open to the public between May 1 and October 1. If you're in the Daytona area during Florida's off season (when many of the members are up north), take advantage of the club's policy and get a tee time. Sugar Mill lies a few miles off I-95 in New Smyrna Beach, about a 30 minutes drive from Daytona Beach Shores.

Opened in 1970, Sugar Mill is one of the area's older, more established golf/residential communities. Both the golf course and the community reflect a graceful maturity not always found in other developments. Aged cypress, pines and oaks and other vegetation that line many of the fairways provide canopy for the residences, secluding them from the golf course. The phased development of Sugar Mill is reflected in the varied architectural styles of the homes, which range from the wood-frame to the contemporary.

Before the land was developed, hunters stalked deer, wild bear and even boar on this heavily wooded site that later became a retreat of the Ford Philpot Evangelistic Institute. Now, the only religious activity on the site are the orisons silently performed by golfers negotiating a beautifully groomed course that consists of three nines - the White, Red and Blue. The White-Red course was finished in the 1970s and the Blue was completed in 1984.

The Sugar Mill course is a throwback to the best in traditional architecture. There are no tricks here, just straightforward, what-you-see-is-what-you-get golf. The course is not overly long but it is not a pushover. Lakes, trees and the occasional tight fairway keep golfers alert. The best of the nines is the blue that includes a marvelous dogleg left short par 4 of 357 yards from the back. A huge oak whose branches tower over the left side of the fairway all but ensure a bogey here if the tee shot is too far left. Another oak similarly situated at the joint of the dogleg on the 416-yard 6th hole puts a high price on distance and accuracy off the tee if this one is to be mastered as well. As with all the nines, if you pick the correct tee markers, you'll have a fun and challenging experience. *

Daytona Golf

Not a Member?
Join Now - It's FREE!
Member Sign In
Keep me logged in
One-Piece Takeaway Cock your wrist up (not back), swing your arms back, turn your shoulders and rotate your forearms
Proper Body Movement: The Pivot Rotate around your axis and maintain the same posture throughout your swing in order to pivot properly
Proper Pitch Shot Technique CHRIS TOULSON demonstrates pitching basics including set up, wrist hinge, turning of the body and finish position