Private
4
2 Reviews

Desert Forest Golf Club

Designed by Red Lawrence, ASGCA and opened in 1962
Desert Forest - Carefree, Arizona

Course Details

Holes:
18
Par:
72
Length:
7011 yards
Slope:
149
Rating:
73.8
Driving Ranges:
Yes
Estimated Green Fees
$210
These rates are an estimate of what you might expect to pay at Desert Forest with a cart. Actual rates may vary.
Fees are typically lowest Monday through Thursday and during twilight (late afternoon and evenings). Expect to pay the highest rates on weekends.

Scorecard for Desert Forest

HOLE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 OUT 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 IN TOT
Gold75.50/149 404 456 168 441 464 371 551 231 533 3619 392 594 194 466 329 435 535 170 467 3582 7201
Blue74.50/142 397 428 168 392 440 361 530 203 494 3413 392 573 194 449 309 378 523 170 415 3403 6816
Black72.20/133 377 408 141 381 397 346 530 191 494 3265 371 553 169 416 297 368 514 159 402 3249 6514
Silver70.40/120 351 397 127 369 351 346 518 173 474 3106 357 540 153 393 297 349 496 148 353 3086 6192
Green (L)73.40/136 356 342 120 370 310 290 466 121 433 2808 358 495 150 346 282 344 442 110 320 2847 5655
Silver (L)76.40/139 351 397 127 369 351 346 518 173 474 3106 357 540 153 393 297 349 496 148 353 3086 6192
Par 4 4 3 4 4 4 5 3 5 36 4 5 3 4 4 4 5 3 4 36 72
Swipe to See full table

Desert Forest Flyover

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Desert Forest Yardage Maps

Plan your shots effectively with our Yardage Maps. Click on the yardage maps for detailed measurements on every hole, including distances to hazards and key landmarks, ensuring you make the right decisions on every swing.

What Golfers are Saying

4
Based on 2 Reviews
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OK, maybe things have changed quite a bit in two years, or maybe I just disagree with the previous reviewers...
I recently played the course three times (it's a private course, so playing opportunities are limited). It's a fabulous minimalist design. Original contours are used extensively and it's hard to tell if earth moving equipment was used at all outside greens and bunkers (and there are no fairway bunkers). To play the holes properly you really do need both a fade and a draw, and it also helps to be able to control trajectory. Greens are fast and hard and not all that receptive (a few reminded me of Pinehurst #2), and have the old style hand-shaping where a difference in location of a couple feet can significantly affect a putt's break. The genius of the course appears to be in the routing; all natural, generally following natural valleys (or in some cases hilltops), with a variety of shapes. Not a course for a stock fade or draw, but a real ballstrikers course. One of the members told me he thought it was a second shot course. I agree to the extent that it can be almost impossible to two putt if you put your approach shot in a bad spot...but you first have to put a drive in the proper place.
It's currently ranked in the top 50 modern courses in Golf Week (which for for my money has the most accurate ratings) and the top 100 in Golf Digest. It has been on both lists for many years. Don't know about the previous comment about Golf Digest's Board member, but GD has 650 raters and a quantitative system so it's hard to believe one member could skew the ratings much. In any case, in my opinion Desert Forest is clearly a better course than Estancia, Forest Highlands Canyons and Quintero, other Arizona courses I've played that are sometimes in top 100 lists, but to some extent this is a matter of taste (I favor minimalism and value a course that's easy to walk and has no real estate development).
On the day I played there were two foursomes of twenty-somethings behind us, and I was told both groups were made up of members. The club has been around for 50 years, so for sure there were plenty of older members too - and I agree that the ones I met were proud of their course - but they were all very friendly with each other and to me.
The short game practice area mentioned by the previous reviewer has been installed now, and consists of two green/bunker complexes separated by about 80 yards. I only had a quick look but was impressed.
The tips were only a bit over 7000 yards, so perhaps a minor update is required to accommodate the modern game, but I was told several touring professionals have memberships there so I guess they see the value in the course's attributes even if they don't hit driver as often as they're used to.
Overall, a fabulous course and a wonderful place with a sense of history and respect for the game.

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I'm still smiling from sdarcy's review ... his first sentence was so apt! I'll get back to that.
I've played here 6 or 7 times over the years... and have always enjoyed it. It's a flattish, eminently walkable course, with a mix of routine/boring holes and a few good ones. The conditions are passable- the greens are always smooth, healthy and fast. The rough and fairways are not always in the best shape- more brown than green at times. Perhaps there are money issues involved? The practice area is very small and unimpressive, though I heard they are working on improving it. The clubhouse is tiny but very refreshing- nothing here but a bar, eating area, pro shop, and locker rooms. This club is all about golf, nothing else. No pool or tennis! The membership is small and VERY old- the average age has to be mid 70s. This is in some ways a good thing- my bet is the course is never busy. Though it makes one wonder about their financial stability at a time when younger members can't afford clubs and the older members continue to have a high rate of attrition...
To circle back to my appreciation for sdarcy's review, I think
"haughty" truly does define the attitude here. Not unfriendly, mind you... just a little arrogant about what they think they have. And they have something decent- a solid little course in a pretty area. Championship caliber? No way. I've always laughed that Golf Digest ranks DF in its top 100, over many superior Arizona courses (I can think of 5 within 10 miles of this course that blow it away). Word has it a Golf Digest board member is a DF member- makes one wonder about the rating system's legitemacy.
Over the years I've thought about what it would take for Desert Forest to achieve the standard that Golf Digest mistakenly thinks it has. The course has been around a while (1962) and is starting to get a little long in the tooth. The situation reminds me a little bit of Pinnacle Peak CC, another course that would be well advised to spend a million or two in consultation with a top architect to add length, bunkers and fairway contouring and otherwise tweak the holes. Despite the limitations of the land (not very dramatic) they have good fundamentals here... it just needs a lot of work to take it up a couple of levels. They probably don't have the cash or the self-awareness to realize they fall so far short... and it's a shame.

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View More Courses in Carefree
Year Opened: 1985
34631 N Tom Darlington Dr, Carefree, AZ, 85377-2090
2 miles from the center of Carefree
18 Holes
72 Par
6,291 Yards
Driving Range: Yes
Year Opened: 2022
34631 N Tom Darlington Dr, Carefree, AZ, 85377-2090
2 miles from the center of Carefree
18 Holes
71 Par
6,073 Yards
Driving Range: Yes
Desert Forest Golf Club Course Layout & Flyover
37207 N Mule Train Rd, Carefree, AZ
85377-4046
(480) 488-4589
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