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Rotorua (Arikikapakapa)

Rotorua, Bay of Plenty
Rotorua, Bay of Plenty
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The Rotorua Golf Club is more than one hundred years old, with members having celebrated its centenary in 2006. The original club members played at several different locations before finally settling at the Arikikapakapa Reserve in 1912. There still remains some debate over who is the club’s landlord – it seems the Crown did not pay the Ngati Whakaue iwi (local Maori tribe) for the land in the late 19th century, but assumed responsibility for it under the terms of a wider agreement. There are also current negotiations over possible transfer of the land back to the local Maori people.

The first course was a 9-hole affair but this was extended to an 18-hole layout seven years later. Charles Redhead, an Irish engineer who came to have a hand in the design of seven of our Top 30 ranked NZ courses, joined the club in 1924, and oversaw a remodeling of the course over the next 10-15 years. Alister MacKenzie met with Redhead at Rotorua during his short visit to New Zealand in 1927, but it's not known specifically what advice the doctor imparted.

In the late 1990s, the Arikikapakapa course was upgraded; all of the greens were re-constructed, with some other layout changes that led to the establishment of the superb par three 14th.

The highly porous pumice landscape of the property allows rainwater to drain rapidly (after even the heaviest of storms) so the course is rarely closed. Other unique natural features on the Rotorua course include bubbling mud pools, steam vents, sulphur mounds, steamy, warm water creeks and a huge thermal crater to the left of the 14th hole.

The toughest hole on the course, the long par four 3rd, provides an early test. Tee shots need to land short of a hot creek, leaving a mid to long iron approach into a raised target that falls away sharply on the left. Of the four par threes on the card, the best known is the 9th as it has featured on a New Zealand postage stamp and has been written about by many golf writers down the years.

Holes 14 to 16 are played around a lake – where steam can be seen to rise on chilly mornings in the winter – and many rounds have come to grief on this stretch so late in the round. But the 18th is a favourite of many as the views from the elevated tee across to the Whakarewarewa thermal reserve and the hilly woodland beyond are simply sensational.

The Rotorua Golf Club is more than one hundred years old, with members having celebrated its centenary in 2006. The original club members played at several different locations before finally settling at the Arikikapakapa Reserve in 1912. There still remains some debate over who is the club’s landlord – it seems the Crown did not pay the Ngati Whakaue iwi (local Maori tribe) for the land in the late 19th century, but assumed responsibility for it under the terms of a wider agreement. There are also current negotiations over possible transfer of the land back to the local Maori people.

The first course was a 9-hole affair but this was extended to an 18-hole layout seven years later. Charles Redhead, an Irish engineer who came to have a hand in the design of seven of our Top 30 ranked NZ courses, joined the club in 1924, and oversaw a remodeling of the course over the next 10-15 years. Alister MacKenzie met with Redhead at Rotorua during his short visit to New Zealand in 1927, but it's not known specifically what advice the doctor imparted.

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Course Architect

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Charles Redhead

It has been claimed that by 1937, there were not more than four courses of note in the whole of New Zealand that had not been remodelled or bunkered by Charles Redhead.

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