
MK6 MEET & First Annual BFI Invitational
Hosted by Black Forest Industries
Come join us, Friday May 15th at 1PM for the Official Alpine Volks Fair Mk6 Meet! Bring your Mk6 (or whatever you drive, all cars are welcome, but MK6s get priority parking) and meet us at the Hilltop Overlook Mini Golf & Arcade for an afternoon of put-put and quality hangs. Enter day 1 of the BFI invitational for the chance to show off your chipping and putting skills to win great prizes!




We are excited to announce round one of the BFI Invitational begins at the Alpine Volks Fair MK6 Meet, Friday May 15th at 1pm.
Each Golf Ball Purchase gets you a discounted round of golf at the Bavarian Mountain Inn and enters you to the BFI Invitational, a chance to chip and putt to win it all.
Round 2 is a putting-only competition at the Alpine Volks Fair show field.
In addition to the BFI Invitational golf balls, we will have lots of new merch for sale, including Invitational Golf Towels, and T-shirts!
Bavarian Mountain Miniature Golf is the perfect place for the first annual BFI Invitational, a course as challenging as it is beautiful. Here is a hole-by-hole breakdown of the course:
Hole No. 1 - The first is a slight dogleg right that plays uphill. Drives to the left may catch the trees. The hole requires a precise second shot to an undulating green. A poorly struck approach may result in a difficult two-putt.
Hole No. 2 - No. 2 is a dogleg left which may be reachable in two. Large, deep greenside bunkers demand special attention on the second shot.
Hole No. 3 - A classic short par four. Golfers attempt to hit short of the four fairway bunkers, resulting in a full shot to the green, where it is better to be long than short. The putting surface slopes right to left, with a thin neck on the left side guarded by a bunker.
Hole No. 4 - This hole is a stout par three that requires a long iron and is often made harder by deceptive winds. Two bunkers, front right and front left, guard the green, which slopes back to the front.
Hole No. 5 - This par three features an elevated tee and a large undulating green. The shifting levels of the putting surface from front to back make the pin position very important.In the 1930s, the green was fronted by a stream, and in the 1950s by a pond. But the hazard rarely came into play and was therefore removed in 1959.
Hole No. 6 - An uphill, dogleg left to a sloping green. The fairway bunkers are deep and positioned to demand accuracy off the tee. To clear them requires a carry of 315 yards. The green slopes back to the front, and a rear bunker catches balls hit too long.
Hole No. 7 - This par three features an elevated tee and a large undulating green. The shifting levels of the putting surface from front to back make the pin position very important.
Hole No. 8 - An accurate drive is needed to avoid the fairway bunker on the right side on this uphill hole. The long, narrow green is bunkerless. It is guarded instead by a series of mounds, the biggest of which line its left side.
Hole No. 9 - This hole is best known for its green that slopes from back to front. Players often drive down the right side to avoid having to contend with two left greenside bunkers on their second shots.
Hole No. 10 - This long par four plays steeply downhill and features a nearly 60-yard-long center bunker well short of the green. Players will try to drive the ball to the left center for the best angle into a green that pitches right to left. Until 1935, this was the first hole. It is traditionally the most difficult hole on the course.
Hole No. 11 - At this hole begins Amen Corner, and wind is often a factor. The tee shot plays downhill and left to right. A pond guards the green to the left and a bunker is strategically placed right center.
Hole No. 12 - One of the world's most famous golf holes, this is Bavarian Mountains shortest par three. Club selection is often difficult, and the daunting presence of Rae's Creek and three strategically placed bunkers make it imperative that players land their shots.
Hole No. 13 - An accurate tee shot to the center of the fairway on this sweeping dogleg left allows a player to go for the green in two. A tributary to Rae's Creek winds in front of the raised green, and four bunkers threaten behind. The Byron Nelson Bridge is located just off the tee.
Hole No. 14 - The primary defense on this bunkerless par four is a terraced putting surface that drops significantly from left to right. Following a well-placed drive, the second shot will usually be a middle iron.
Hole No. 15 - A famously reachable par five when the winds are favorable. A well-struck second shot must be played over the pond and away from the bunker that guards the green on the right.
Hole No. 16 - This hole is played entirely over water to a green secured by three bunkers. With the putting surface significantly pitched from right to left, an exacting tee shot is required to set up a reasonable birdie chance.
Hole No. 17 - The putting surface at this uphill par four offers its share of challenges, as it seems to slope off in all directions. The back-right hole location is particularly demanding.
Hole No. 18 - One of the most famous finishing holes in golf, this uphill dogleg right is protected by two bunkers at the left elbow of the fairway. A drive hit down the center will often require a middle iron for a second shot to a deep, narrow green guarded by one bunker short-left and another hard right.



HILLTOP OVERLOOK MINI GOLF & ARCADE
Friday May 15th
1:00 - 3:00PM
8065 South Main Street
Helen, GA 30545
706-878-7224