Granted, Baseline Golf Course is popular in this town in which I now live, but there’s no question it’s a special place. An Ocala resident for 15 months, I only recently visited this very different layout, nestled among beautiful horse farms.
Its beauty is only part of what makes Baseline different from the other courses in the north side of Florida. Different, in this case, is synonymous with good. It’s what makes Baseline a place worth visiting for golfers coming to the Sunshine State from distant areas.
Baseline is a 19-hole executive course, with seven par-4s, 11 par-3s and a bonus hole. Designed by Arlie Parker and Stan Norton in 1988, it’s a privately-owned public facility with a notably spacious practice range. It was built on a former watermelon farm that was liberally spruced up with the planting of ornamental trees and flower gardens.
Parker, a former professional hockey player, grew up in Canada and was a physical education teacher and then owned a painting company in New York before retiring to Florida.
`Then he realized he really loved plants and flowers,’’ said granddaughter Ashley Hodgson, who is Baseline’s general manager. “He planted every tree on the course and also built our waterfall.’’
Now 86, Parker and a partner created a nine-hole course. Parker, the sole owner since the 1990s, added the second nine plus the bonus hole. He still puts in working hours at the course.
Doug Johnson, a former touring pro, has been giving lessons at Baseline for about 30 years and the range has lights to allow for evening activity there. The rest of the staff numbers 8-10 for inside duties and 10 for the outside work. There’s also a mechanic who works full time.
One very important thing for golfers to know before making their first visit to Baseline. There are no tee times. There may be a wait before you can tee off, but you can kill time browsing through a well-stocked pro shop that has tons of good deals or using the driving range or putting green beside the first tee. More