The diversions and instruments of Strawgrass, gathered under one roof — a daily puzzle, the register of aces, rulings from the Committee, the live view from The Dam, and more.
A new putt to read each day. Six attempts. Miss, and the pin waits until tomorrow.
Play today →Five balls over the lake to the fourteenth green. Read the wind and try to clear golf’s smallest big test.
Take your shot →Nine holes of putt-putt through the ornamental garden, finishing across the miniature Dam. Drag to putt; mind the barn cat.
Play a round →A nine-hole match against a legend pairing. Pick your drive, hole your putts, and try to close them out.
Play the match →A putting green with real break. Read the slope, judge your pace, and hole the longest streak you can.
Read the green →The caddie posts a number and needles you until you beat it. Closest to the pin, his voice throughout.
Take him on →A frosted dawn and a waiting field. Clear the greens and keep ahead of the frost as long as you can.
Beat the frost →By order of the House: the Caddie’s Bar tabs that remain unsettled, days outstanding counted honestly, offered in gentle encouragement.
View the ledger →A short column filed each morning from the caddie’s shed — today’s weather, a legend sighting, and word from the grounds.
Read today’s dispatch →The House’s ledger of every bet of record — dollar-a-hole friendlies, Calcutta heists, and a bramble once played for a bass boat.
Open the book →The daily gossip report from the shed — wild tall tales, the shot of the day, rumors from the range, and much that stays unconfirmed.
Read the report →A collectible card for every legend of the grounds — stat line, career Calcutta earnings, and a Toby scouting note. Flip and download.
See the set →Sign the permanent register of visitors to the grounds — your name, your hometown, and a line for the record.
Sign the register →Submit to the Committee’s assessment and be issued a certified handicap index, flight, and privileges — framed and sealed.
Be assessed →The Committee’s finest verdicts, elevated one per week. Read the standing docket — and submit your own situation.
Read the docket →Bid a play-money bankroll on the twenty-four Invitational teams, run the tournament, and see whether your book pays out.
Buy the field →Frame-quality printable cards — the Prairie Fire, Pedro’s margarita, and two from King Louie’s Meat Apostles.
Print the set →Our broadcast from the fourteenth — the leaderboard, the lake, and the afternoon wave.
Watch →Submit your situation and receive a ruling. The Committee does not entertain appeals.
Seek a ruling →The permanent register of every hole-in-one ever struck upon these grounds.
View the register →Commemorate your hole-in-one with a certificate drawn at print resolution, fit for framing.
Claim yours →Mint the scorecard of a round you lived to sign, and wear it as a badge of survival.
Mint the card →Generate your personal invitation to the grounds, ready to keep or to share.
Compose it →Live conditions over the prairie, updated through the day. The prairie writes its own forecast.
Check the sky →