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Build a Miniature Golf Course in Your Backyard

SAFETY FIRST: Ask an adult to help with tools you haven't used before.

golf-top

With this simple project, you’ll be outside playing miniature golf in no time. Build your course with any available combination of bricks, wood, aluminum siding, whatever works.

The game is best played with a croquet set, because the balls are larger and easier to control, but golf equipment is fine, too, especially for advanced players.

WHAT YOU’LL NEED

You or a neighbor might have some 2-by-4’s or a stack of cinderblocks behind the garage, or ask at a construction site if you can haul away some of their cast-off masonry and lumber. Go to a hardware store for everything else you need or to pick up a few extras.

Total cost depends on your own resourcefulness, the size of your course and the complexity of each hole. Common red cement bricks sell for as little as 22 cents apiece; count on buying at least 100. Also look for things like a roll of chicken wire (about $5), 20 gardening stakes ($6) and a few boards ($15 max.).

Innovation is the key. Experiment. You might build one hole in 15 minutes but invest an hour in the next, carefully aligning a series of ramps or cutting doors in a cardboard box.

There’s no need to mess up the yard — use a croquet stake, a wicket or even just a piece of duct tape on the ground as your “hole.”

Here are three classic designs to get you started.


THE MAZE: Par 5

Tools: None

Materials: About 43 bricks, five heavier cinderblocks

golf-maze

1. Begin at the entrance, setting bricks in two parallel lines. The central island of cinderblocks is angled so that players are directed toward the right side of the maze (and into the pocket trap, if they strike too hard).

2. The cinderblocks go wherever a player is expected to bank his shots, since they’ll withstand impact better.

3. The “short cut” to the left is barely wider than a ball and can be reached only with a perfect set-up. Otherwise, players continue around to the right, where they can get an excellent double-bank shot off the two blocks in back.

4. Note the second pocket trap and the four bricks stacked as a guard in front of the finish.


TUNNEL IN THE SKY: Par 4

Tools: Wire cutters or pliers and a saw

Materials: About 50 bricks, six cinderblocks, a 3-foot-long roll of wire, two 3-foot-by-1-foot planks, one leftover piece of plank

golf-tunnel

1. Loosen the wire roll so that it becomes a tube, more than big enough for a ball to go through. Secure the tube by bending in a few loose ends with wire cutters or pliers.

2. Carefully size your planks and assemble the tunnel, using twin towers of two cinderblocks each.

3. In front, the plank should rest on top of the block tower, creating a small lip, so balls drop slightly into the wire tube. In back, the second plank must be level with the top of the tower, so support it underneath with an extra cinderblock.

4. Arrange your bricks in channels on either end of the tunnel. The front is a simple L-shape, with a cinderblock embankment at the corner. The back is more wide open, with a “ricochet” plank or another cinderblock set below the downhill ramp.


JUMP BALL: Par 2

Tools: None

Materials: About 27 bricks, 5 1/2 cinderblocks, boards or plywood at least 6 feet by 2 feet.

golf-jump

1. Build a tower of three blocks, lean your ramp against it and set a few guide bricks on each side.

2. Try a few practice shots, testing for range.

3. Set the finish with 2 1⁄2 cinderblocks in a wall behind it as a backstop. Place the rest of the bricks to complete the square around the finish, leaving two narrow entrances on either side.

4. Make this hole more difficult — Par 4 — by elevating the front wall with extra material to prevent low balls from bouncing over.

This design puts the finish more than 20 feet from the ramp — have some fun launching a ball that far!


OTHER IDEAS FOR HOLES

Bumper Ball is any channel that has been randomly spiked to make a forest of obstacles. Use tent stakes, croquet wickets or gardening stakes.

The Chute is a variant of Tunnel in the Sky, with only one tower and ramp, using either five-inch drain pipe or a length of rain gutter to lead back to earth.

The Mousetrap is a big open-topped cardboard box, properly weighted down, with two or more doors cut into its face but only one way out.

Tidal Wave is a series of low ramps to jump across.

Volcano is a ramp that must be finessed, with the finish directly below the edge of the ramp.

Shotgun is a long open space with three narrow courseways on the far side, all but one of which are pocket traps.

The Long Maze might run to par 10 and is hilarious for croquet rules as players battle and hunt each other among the twists and turns.


SCORING AND RULES

Par is the term for the average number of stokes it takes to complete a golf hole. Always set par at a number that can reasonably be bested by one stroke. This score, one below par, is called a Birdie. On the Maze hole, if a player is able to get into the shortcut, he might finish in four strokes. Therefore, this design is a Par 5.

Backyard mini golf can be played in many ways.

Golf rules means the player with the lowest total strokes is the winner.

Croquet rules means the first player to reach the end of the course takes the trophy — and by striking another player’s ball, you earn an extra turn (or you can use it to smack that ball into an unfavorable spot).

Before you start, set all rules in stone. If a ball shoots sideways off Tunnel in the Sky, can that player take a “drop” back inside the brick walls? Does that cost him an extra stroke? Or does he have to work all the way back around to the entrance? Is there a maximum number of strokes at each hole (at amusement parks, it’s usually six) or do you play on until you’re successful, no matter the challenge?

It’s your game — you make the rules.


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50 Comments on Build a Miniature Golf Course in Your Backyard

  1. i thoart it sound’s fantastic

  2. it is good

  3. i still can’t figure out how to put the water in so it will sink.

  4. i really like golf and i itch on my neck because it makes me happy.

  5. This thing was awsome and me and my brother play it every day since we were 3 and now we are 72

  6. I love to play golf

  7. I thought it would have bean better

  8. Way neato! My friend Calvin and I are going to try using old tomato cages for obstacles to hit our balls through.

  9. im going to try tunnel in the sky!!!!!it looks cool and fun!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  10. This website is a great idea, making golf courses is FUN

  11. Bleedalot // May 16, 2007 at 1:20 pm // Reply

    i dont know i hated my golf course

  12. That is a coolllllllllllllllllllllllll idea. Lets hope my dad wont get mad at me! Try a stick for a club and a ball or cylinder for the ball!

  13. we are doing this at a campout

  14. Anonymous // May 10, 2007 at 4:10 pm // Reply

    wow

  15. In the words of lary the cably guy giter done;)

  16. MaNiAc:)137 // May 1, 2007 at 9:23 pm // Reply

    Cool idea but people learn to spell please!!

  17. this golf things the man

  18. Sweetness!

  19. I do!

  20. could i please build one!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  21. brill dude

  22. I love golf

  23. i’m building a minigolf for math. i didn’t thik it would be fun but i was wrong

  24. i like this site……….but yet i like everything and one!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  25. i like it baby!!!!!!

  26. i can’t wait =]

  27. looks so cool!!!!! : )

  28. typeyournamehere // April 8, 2007 at 4:48 pm // Reply

    instead of using a croquet pinn U can dig a hole and put a cup in it

  29. they should make a computer game where you make your own golf coures and you play it in glasses (uploed the cources in the glasses get a plastic stick and imagin it’s a golf stick thing)

  30. Try a hill everyone see how hard it is.

  31. really neat!!-i have afterschool care with boys ages 8-14 anf they loved this project and then i have daycare boys ages 3 and they loved this with the croquet mallets and balls–it’s up still 2weeks later and the hit of the neighborhood-=thanks for a wonderful project!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~l

  32. count me in

  33. I LOVE GOLF!!!

  34. dahchfjfjfjff // April 4, 2007 at 11:29 am // Reply

    awesome! {‘.’} 🙂

  35. little big man // April 3, 2007 at 5:17 pm // Reply

    cool

  36. Awsome!

  37. Fredy Kruger // April 2, 2007 at 5:41 pm // Reply

    cool!

    il make one of them

    KRUGER

  38. This sounds so cool!!!!!!!!

  39. Not2be4gotten // April 1, 2007 at 3:24 pm // Reply

    I wanted to build my own coarse before i saw this. I will try to make a hole in june. when it is done, does anyone want to come over and play?

  40. I did it and it’s fun. I didn’t do the designs as it says,but they are all easy-to-make and fun.

  41. its fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuun

  42. I Think It Is Cool

  43. What Fun

  44. I think this is a good game

  45. thes is nies

  46. this is fun

  47. i want to play

  48. i love golf so it sounds great!!!!!!!!!

  49. cooooooooooooooollllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll…………….

  50. I think this build your own mini golf course is going to be great.

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