Boyne Golf in Michigan adds a lighted par-3 course, Doon Brae, on a ski slope near lodge

The Doon Brae par-3 course will be the 11th course for Boyne Golf in Michigan.

Boyne Golf, already home to 10 golf courses in Michigan, is adding a new par-3 course to be designed by Ray Hearn. The lighted nine-hole layout will be sculpted into the ski slope behind The Highlands Main Lodge in Harbor Springs and is scheduled to open in the summer of 2024.

The course will be named Doon Brae, with Doon reflecting the act of descending, as in going into a valley, and Brae meaning a steep bank or hillside in Scottish. It will be in a location formerly used for the resort’s Cuff Links par-3 course.

“As far as I know, this is the first modern golf course ever built on a ski hill,” Bernie Friedrich, director of golf course renovations and development at Boyne Resorts, said in a media release announcing the course. “What excites me most is how beautiful and different it is. There are three or four stacked wall bunkers. Instead of using tee boxes, we’ll have just one marker on each hole and let guests play wherever they want.

“And the greens are inspired by some of the great ones around the world. They’re not copies of any specific greens, but they look different and are big. We also sodded all of the fairways, which will be well-maintained and surrounded by some tall fescue for that whisper look and feel. It’s going to be quite stunning.”

The plans for the new Doon Brae par-3 course at Boyne Golf in Harbor Springs, Michigan (Courtesy of Boyne Golf)

Hearn, a Michigan native, is working with the resort destination on several projects with its other courses. He also will design a 1.5-acre putting course alongside Doon Brae.

For Doon Brae, Hearn is focused on minimizing any uphill walks, even with the course on a steep slope. The layout will play between 678 and 993 yards, generally moving horizontally across the slope. Holes will range from 57 to 134 yards. Hearn said he was inspired by Royal County Down in Northern Ireland when designing Doon Brae, and also by many famous template greens.

“Boyne Golf is one of the top golf resort destinations attracting thousands of golfers annually from all over the country, and I wanted to make sure we were creating something fun and unique without being a difficult walk,” Hearn said in the media release. “We also considered all the families who would take their kids out. When you look at the routing, it works – No. 1 is a level hole, 2 is uphill, 3 is downhill, 4 is uphill, 5, 6 and 7 are kind of sidehill with 5 slightly uphill, with 8 and 9 playing downhill.”

The course also will feature fire pits, music and food service.

“Guests can gather for games and fun, while enjoying their favorite beverage and taking in all the beauty of Northern Michigan,” Josh Richter, senior vice president of golf operations for Boyne Resorts, said in the media release. “It’s going to be heck of space for all to enjoy in a way that is best for them. Having music playing as well will make it a fantastic entertainment environment.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451193668]

Golfweek’s Best: Where to play golf in Michigan, from Forest Dunes to Arcadia Bluffs, Boyne to Greywalls

Michigan offers miles of great golf at Arcadia Bluffs, Forest Dunes, Greywalls, Boyne, Belvedere, Island Resort & Casino and Eagle Eye.

Red barns and cows. Narrow two-line highways and trees – so many trees. Grand lake views stretched to the horizon. Blue jean jackets and gas stations attached to liquor stores. Tall cornfields and billboards advertising only the finest marijuana edibles.

And incredible golf.

Michigan is more rural than an outsider might expect, full of farms and small-town crossroads. Outside Detroit and a few midsize cities, the Great Lakes State is the embodiment of Midwestern agrarian living, this despite it being the 10th-most populous state among the 50.

And thanks to a boom of golf course developments over the past 25 years mixed with a handful of exceptional classic tracks, Michigan offers what could be considered a surprisingly inspiring spread of public-access layouts. Outsiders might expect states such as California, Arizona and Florida to be packed with solid golf, but a recent study of Golfweek’s Best ranked courses revealed that Michigan offers the seventh-best sampling of elite public-access layouts in the country, ahead of such golf-heavy destinations as Hawaii and Virginia. Not bad for a state where the golf season doesn’t stretch much past seven months before the snow falls in many locales.

The Links nine at Boyne’s Bay Harbor Golf Club in Michigan (Courtesy of Boyne Golf/Evan Schiller)

I was there to see as many courses as I could fit into 11 days. Landing in Detroit and cruising west toward Lake Michigan, I would tee it up at 15 layouts – including a new par-3 course – and put some 1,400 miles on my rental car’s odometer before dropping it off in Milwaukee, the easiest major airport for me to reach after sliding my carry bag back into its travel case at the end of the trip.

This trip started with an airport arrival in Detroit and meandered all the way north into the Upper Peninsula along the shores of Lake Superior with samples of everything from daily-fee options with one course to a winter-season ski destination with 10 tracks. The only rule was the courses had to offer spots on their tee sheets to non-members. I started my planning with the goal of playing the top five Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in the state and added plenty more, including four days in the Upper Peninsula hosting a tournament for Golfweek’s Best raters. My golf route, in order:

  • Eagle Eye, No. 5 in Michigan on the 2021 Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts
  • Arcadia Bluffs’ Bluffs Course in Arcadia, No. 1 in Michigan
  • Arcadia Bluffs’ South Course, No. 6 in Michigan
  • Forest Dunes’ Bootlegger par-3 course
  • Forest Dunes’ The Loop, No. 3 in Michigan
  • Forest Dunes, No. 4 in Michigan
  • Belvedere, No. 9 in Michigan
  • Boyne Golf’s Arthur Hills course, No. 19 in Michigan
  • Boyne Golf’s Donald Ross Memorial
  • Boyne Golf’s The Heather
  • Boyne Golf’s Bay Harbor (Links/Quarry nines), No. 8 in Michigan
  • Island Resort & Casino’s Sage Run
  • Timberstone
  • Marquette Greywalls, No. 2 in Michigan
  • Island Resort & Casino’s Sweetgrass, tied for No. 15 in Michigan

One of the best parts: The end of summer in Michigan offers some of the best-rolling greens found in the country. Bent grass thrives at this latitude, and the putting surfaces I sampled were, without exception, pure. Perfect greens frequently are an imperfect goal – there’s a lot more to great golf than smooth and fast greens – but seeing ball after ball roll across Michigan’s putting surfaces with hardly a bump or wiggle was a highlight of my trip.

It was an unforgettable and sometimes exhausting romp, with nine rounds played on foot and six in carts. There were cliffside holes overlooking one of the Great Lakes followed by secluded, forested layouts – even a fast and firm track that plays in one direction one day, the other direction the next. Hills, valleys, bluffs – a few birdies to keep things rolling, and so many bogeys. Too much golf and never enough, always waking before sunrise to squeeze in more holes, trying to finish before dark with enough time to find an open restaurant while avoiding the roadside deer that flashed through my high beams en route to that night’s bed.

Simply put, a wandering golfer’s dream.