The Prairie West Golf Club staff and Board of Directors hope you enjoy your golf experience. Our golf course was designed by Ward Maynard and will challenge low handicap golfers from the tips, while three other tee options on each hole will allow all levels of golfers an enjoyable test. Our Bermuda grass fairways and tees are well-landscaped, and our bentgrass greens are in great shape to give you a quality golf outing.
Take a look at the gallery below to get some hints about each hole. Thank you for visiting Weatherford’s Prairie West Golf Club!
Start your round with a blind tee shot. A drive in the fairway will set you up for a possible birdie, but miss the fairway and you might be totally blocked by trees.
Another blind tee shot. An accurate, long drive will set you up for a good shot to a raised green. Avoid the bunkers on the right and left of the green!
A challenging drive over a low area due to the prevailing south wind. If you don’t make it to the upper part of the fairway, you’ll have a blind second shot.
A slight dogleg left that requires a drive that stays on the right side of the fairway. A drive on the left side of the fairway might mean your second shot to the green is blocked by trees.
This par 3 calls for a shot that preferably stays below the hole on a green that slopes toward the water hazard.
This dogleg right par 5 hole is a birdie opportunity with a good drive to the corner and a solid second shot toward the green.
Another dogleg right that rewards a decent drive with a good chance for a birdie with an accurate short iron to a raised green.
This long par 3 requires a tee shot that takes the prevailing wind into account. Careful with your putt because this green tilts forward and to the left from the tee box!
A long drive and a well-placed second shot can set you up for a birdie on this dogleg right par 5. Be careful to avoid the trees on the right of the green.
This straightforward par 3 requires an accurate tee shot, but try to keep the ball below the hole because the green slopes toward the front.
Thanks to prevailing south winds, this can be a birdie hole. Hit a long drive in the fairway and you should be in good shape. This green slopes to the front and to the left, so putt carefully!
A short par 4 that long hitters can drive, but if you lose the shot to the left you will deal with out-of-bounds.
This slight dogleg right is a good birdie opportunity, but watch out for the water hazard that guards the right side of the fairway.
This par 3 usually plays against the prevailing wind to a green guarded by trees and bunkers. Depending on the wind, you might use any one of four different clubs for the tee shot.
A dogleg left that requires an accurate drive. A drive to the left will put you in the trees and a miss right might end up in a bunker.
Stay in the fairway and you might have a good birdie chance, but there is trouble on the left and right on this par 4.
Try to keep your drive on the left side of this fairway as the prevailing south wind will no doubt push it right. Avoid the trees that guard the green from the left rough.
Again, the prevailing south wind can make this blind tee shot challenging. If you don’t stay in the narrow fairway, you’ll probably be blocked from a clean shot at the green by trees on the left and right.