PORT LUDLOW RESORT
🇺🇸 Port Ludlow, WA, USA
Designed by Robert Muir Graves
Port Ludlow Resort operates two nine-hole courses—Timber and Trail—designed by Robert Muir Graves and opened in the early 1970s as part of a planned resort community on Washington's Olympic Peninsula. The property occupies forested terrain along Ludlow Bay, approximately thirty miles northwest of Seattle via ferry and highway. Graves, a prolific West Coast architect who worked extensively in the Pacific Northwest and California during the mid-twentieth century, routed both nines through dense stands of Douglas fir and cedar, incorporating the natural elevation changes and wooded corridors typical of the region.
The Timber nine plays through heavier forest cover with tighter fairways and more pronounced elevation shifts, while the Trail nine features somewhat more open terrain and water hazards, including ponds that come into play on several holes. Both nines can be combined in different pairings to create eighteen-hole rounds of varying character. The design reflects the resort-course sensibilities of its era, offering recreational golf within a residential development framework rather than championship-length challenge.
Port Ludlow functions primarily as a member and resort guest facility, serving the local community and visitors to the Olympic Peninsula. The course setting provides views of Puget Sound and the surrounding forested landscape, and the layout remains largely as Graves conceived it, with mature tree growth now defining the playing corridors more emphatically than when the course first opened.
Reviews
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Timber/Trail was designed by Robert Muir Graves.
Yes. Timber/Trail at Port Ludlow Resort is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Timber/Trail is 72.
Timber/Trail plays 6,756 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Timber/Trail is 138.
Timber/Trail is a 18-hole course.