Download the Clear Lake Golf Course app to enhance your golf experience!
This app includes:
- Interactive Scorecard
- Golf Games: Skins, Stableford, Par, Stroke Scoring
- GPS
- Measure your shot!
- Golfer Profile with Automatic Stats Tracker
- Hole Descriptions & Playing Tips
- Live Tournaments & Leaderboards
- Book Tee Times
- Course Tour
- Food & Beverage Menu
- Facebook Sharing
- And much more…
Located in Riding Mountain National Park at the East end of Clear Lake, the Clear Lake Golf Course is one of the most unique, picturesque and environmentally friendly golf courses in Manitoba.
The Clear Lake Golf Course was built in two stages commencing in 1928. Renowned architect Stanley Thompson designed the front nine while the back nine was designed and built by Vic Creed with supervision from Park Superintendent Mr. Smart. The complete course was open for play in the spring of 1934.
Stretching to 6,309 yards, the Clear Lake Golf Course provides a unique experience for golfers of all skill levels. The undulating landscape and picturesque views will make you feel like you are not in Manitoba; its an experience unlike any other!
The Clear Lake Golf Course came in as a finalist for the 2009 Parks Canada Sustainable Tourism Award. Our golf management teams commitment to the environment is to "preserve the course for future generations". If each of us contributes we can help make a better world.
Greg Holden, our past golf course superintendent for 25 years, alongside with the management team, has spearheaded the changes at the Clear Lake Golf Course. We recycle all of our plastic, bottles and cans so they dont go to the dump. We also compost all our grass clippings and kitchen wastes which is later used on the golf course. We have composting toilets which saves 300,000 gallons of water each season. If you are on our course and you get a whiff of French fries in the air that is because six maintenance machines are using cooking oil as bio-diesel. We annually recycle as much as 10,000 liters of otherwise useless waste product by using the cooking oil.
"The only downside weve found to the cooking oil project is that golfers are reporting a constant craving for fast foods" Holden jokes.