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Have you played Gulf Shores? Send GolfLink a brief review and we'll publish it. And
Alan Nichols always appreciates your comments on his features. Contact info below.
An enjoyable Southern golf trek included a
four-day visit to the Gulf Shores, Alabama area on the Gulf of Mexico coast. Once a quick
stop for truckers and other nomads, the former hamlet of Gulf Shores is now a family-style
vacation resort -- a miniature Ocean City without all the
high-rises.
Kiva Dunes
Because of this change in
demographics and travel patterns, a number of leading golf courses have been built in Gulf
Shores. At the top of the list is Kiva Dunes, named Golf Digest's #2 best new public
course for 1995 and one of the top 75 upscale courses in the U.S. It is also named
Alabama's top public course.
A Jerry Pate creation,
Kiva Dunes was constructed entirely on sand dunes on a thin strip of land separating
Mobile Bay and the Gulf. Adjacent to a wildlife refuge, the course was designed for all
levels of play, and it is a real test from the back at nearly 7092 yards. Fickle ocean
winds make this course doubly challenging. Earlier this year, a group of Nike Tour players
came here to practice and said it was the best conditioned course they had ever played.
Kiva is one of the best
conditioned courses you'll ever play. Its tifdwarf greens are outstanding and the Bermuda
419 fairways are overseeded in the fall with rye, presenting different playing
characteristics in the winter versus the summer. Because of the almost daily winds that
can kick up to 25 knots and more, all but the longest hitters should stay away from the
tips and play from the blues (6500).
Cotton Creek, The
Woodlands, and others
The Gulf Shores area also
boasts a number of other outstanding layouts including Peninsula, Rock Creek, and Timber
Creek all designed by Alabama native son Earl Stone; Cotton Creek, a 27-hole Arnold Palmer
design; and The Woodlands, a 6400-yard lake-dotted course created by PGA player Larry
Nelson that includes a fairway with two oak trees smack in the middle.
Six short miles from Kiva
Dunes, Peninsula is a development course with a strong front nine and coastal features.
Rock Creek in nearby Fairhope, about a 25-minute drive from Gulf Shores, is an outstanding
course, offering elevation changes atypical of this area. With a 73.8 rating and a 144
slope, Timber Creek off I-10 near Mobile Bay may be the supremist test on the Alabama
coast. Cotton Creek on Hwy 59 just minutes from Gulf Shores is scenic and more forgiving
than Kiva Dunes. Cotton Creek, Peninsula, Rock Creek, Glenlakes and The Woodlands
are fun courses that might well appeal to the more casual golfer.
Lost Key and Perdido Bay
If you like very tight courses, try Lost Key, a 6800-yard tester
also designed by Arnold Palmer on Perdido Key in the Florida panhandle, just 25 minutes
from Gulf Shores. A very well maintained course on sensitive wildlife terrain including
very narrow landing areas and plenty of marshes, it recently was awarded Audubon
International's signature status.
And though I didn't get
to play it on this trip, another course I have put on my "to play" list and
which should be on yours too, is Perdido Bay in nearby Pensacola, Florida, site of the
former Pensacola Open.
_______________
Alan B. Nichols is
a professional golf-travel writer residing in Bethesda, MD.
He is the featured golf-travel writer
for GolfLink. Alan appreciates your
comments on his features and the courses he has written
about.
E-MAIL ALAN NICHOLS

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