The Three Trip Templates: Which One Fits Your Pair
Most father-son trips in the High Sierra fall into one of three templates depending on skill level, group size, and what kind of experience you're building around the golf.
The Graeagle Template: Two people, 3 nights in a private cabin, 3 rounds at different courses, no casino noise. This is for pairs who want the golf to be the whole point. The Lost Sierra is quiet, the courses are uncrowded, and the evenings are spent on a cabin porch rather than at a blackjack table. Best for any handicap combination.
The Reno Template: Two to six pairs, casino hotel room block, 2–3 rounds at ArrowCreek or Wolf Run, evenings built around casino and dining. This is for multi-family trips or when one generation wants entertainment options beyond golf. Scales well to larger groups.
The Tahoe Template: Two players, 2–3 nights at a Tahoe casino resort (Harvey's or Harrah's), one round at Edgewood Tahoe as the centerpiece. This is for pairs where both players are serious golfers (sub-15 handicap) who want a bucket-list course as the primary memory. Not the right template for large handicap gaps.
“The trips that hold up in memory aren't usually the ones with the fanciest course. They're the ones where the format was fair, both players had a real competition, and neither felt like they were along for a ride.”
— Sean Schaeffer, Golf the High Sierra
Course Selection by Handicap Gap
The single biggest mistake in father-son trip planning is ignoring the handicap gap between players. A 2-handicap son and a 28-handicap father on the same tees at Edgewood Tahoe creates a 5-hour round where neither player enjoys themselves. The right course and format turns a 20-stroke gap into a genuine competition.
Here's how GTHS thinks about course selection by handicap combination:
| Course | Region | Best For | Tee Options | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lakeridge Golf Course | Reno | 20+ handicap | 4 options | Island-green 15th. Most accessible in Reno. |
| Wolf Run Golf Club | Reno | All levels | 4 options | Best pace of play in Reno. Fun for any gap. |
| Red Hawk Golf Resort | Reno | 10–25 handicap | 5 options | Two layouts — split groups if needed. |
| ArrowCreek Lakes | Reno | 8–20 handicap | 5 options | Best multi-gen course in Reno. Real competition. |
| Plumas Pines Golf Resort | Graeagle | 15–30 handicap | 4 options | Forgiving. Beautiful mountain meadow setting. |
| Whitehawk Ranch | Graeagle | 12–25 handicap | 4 options | Stunning. Multiple tees keep it competitive. |
| Grizzly Ranch Golf Club | Graeagle | 8–20 handicap | 4 options | Showpiece. Golf Digest top Sierra course. |
| Edgewood Tahoe | Lake Tahoe | Sub-15 both | 5 options | Bucket-list. Not right for large handicap gaps. |
Graeagle: The Best Region for Most Father-Son Trips
Graeagle in the Lost Sierra is the answer for most father-son trips, and we've been routing groups here for 20 years. The reasons are consistent: four courses within 15 minutes of each other, all with multiple tee box options, private cabin lodging that creates space for the conversations the trip is actually about, and a pace of play that doesn't punish higher handicaps.
Whitehawk Ranch is the most scenic — a Tom Weiskopf design cut through old-growth pines with mountain views on every hole. Plumas Pines is the most forgiving — a valley meadow layout with generous fairways and multiple tees including senior boxes. Grizzly Ranch is the showpiece — Golf Digest named it the top Sierra course, a Bob Cupp design with dramatic elevation changes and the kind of scenery that makes golfers stop mid-round to take photos.
The cabin lodging in Graeagle is the thing that makes the trip. There is no casino, no nightlife, no distraction. You check in, you golf, you sit on the porch. For father-son trips, that simplicity is the point.
The Format Question: How to Make It Competitive
Format selection matters as much as course selection for father-son trips with handicap gaps. The goal is a round where both players have genuine stakes in the outcome, regardless of skill level.
Net stroke play with full handicap: Both players subtract their full handicap from gross score. Works well for gaps up to 15 strokes. Simple to track, creates a real competition, and forces both players to play their best golf.
Net stableford: Points-based format using net scores. More forgiving of blow-up holes — one bad hole doesn't destroy the round. Good for gaps of 10–20 strokes where one player might have trouble with a few difficult holes.
Scramble: Both players hit, choose the best ball, both play from there. Eliminates the gap entirely — becomes a collaboration rather than a competition. Use this when the gap is over 20 strokes or when one player is new to the game. The quality of shots improves, pressure disappears, and conversation flows.
Match play: One hole at a time, net scores, no cumulative damage. A player 3-down with 4 holes to go is still in the match. Creates drama and keeps both players engaged through the entire round regardless of early mistakes.
Reno: The Right Base for Multi-Family Trips
When the father-son trip becomes a multi-family trip — two or three pairs, mothers included, kids who don't golf — Reno is the better base. Casino hotels handle groups of 12–24 people in ways that Graeagle cabins can't. Multiple dining options at different price points, pools, entertainment, and a casino floor that gives non-golfers something to do when the golfers are out for five hours.
ArrowCreek is the right course for these groups. Two 18-hole layouts at different difficulty levels — split the group into ability pairs across the Lakes and Hills courses. Both courses are within 20 minutes of every major casino hotel in Reno.
The Conversation Courses: Where the Trip Actually Happens
Some courses are built for scoring. Others are built for the four-hour conversation that only happens on a golf course. The Graeagle mountain layouts, the meadow holes at Nakoma Dragon, and the valley courses at Genoa Lakes are all courses where the scenery removes the pressure, the pace is unhurried, and the round becomes the container for something else.
If you can walk, walk. The pace changes when you're on foot — you arrive at the ball at the same time, you stand there together between shots, the conversation has space. Cart rounds have their place, but the father-son trips that get described years later usually involved walking.
Book a twilight round on day 1 — lower stakes, nobody's tight yet, and it sets the tone. Let day 2 be the serious competition. Let day 3 be whatever it ends up being.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything your group needs to know before booking.
Plan your father-son golf trip
Tell us both players' handicaps, preferred region, and number of nights. We'll build a trip that works for both generations — and handle every detail so you can focus on the round.


