Carved across more than 250 acres in the shadow of the Niagara Escarpment, Batteaux Creek is equal parts postcard and playground. Architect Stephen Young threaded the creek through rolling terrain and stands of pine, using wetlands and movement to create a rhythm that's as strategic as it is scenic. From the opening tee shot you feel it - wide looks that narrow where it matters, green complexes with honest contours, and a steady hum of risk-reward that keeps adrenaline in the mix.
If you like choices, you'll love the par-5s and drivable (for some) par-4s that lure you into taking on corners or carrying hazards. Play the prudent line and you'll post numbers; bite off a little more and the day gets spicy fast. The creek itself isn't just a backdrop - it's a shot-shaping character that shows up at clever moments, demanding either precision or humility. Pick one.
A differentiator here is how beautifully the course frames long views of the Escarpment while still feeling intimate from shot to shot. It's photographer-friendly golf without the gimmicks: no tricked-up greens, no gotcha hazards, just classic decisions and clean conditioning. With a full-service restaurant and a proper practice setup, it's easy to turn a tee time into a day out with friends.
Short version: Batteaux Creek gives you options, and options are fun. Bring your favorite yardages, commit to your lines, and you'll leave already plotting a rematch.
My buddy Tim called golf “the expensive sport” last summer. He said it while buying his third $14 beer at an NFL game. I let it go – mostly because he was paying for mine too – but the comment stuck with me. Was he right?
I didn’t think so. But I wanted to prove it with actual numbers.
So I dug in. National Golf Foundation reports, concert ticket data, NFL cost analyses, streaming price histories. The full picture. And what came back surprised even me – golf isn’t just holding its own against other entertainment options. In a