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Have you played
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Alan Nichols always appreciates your comments on his features. Contact info below.
[Editor's
Note: This
feature covers Alan Nichols' late 1999 trip to the Cloister
and includes updates at the resort since previous visits
covered in "Georgia On My
Mind".
He also visited the Hilton Head
area a second time on this trip.
The Cloister
If, as the song says, love is better the second time around, does the
same principle apply to golf destinations? Yes, if they happen to be The Cloister
and
Hilton Head. Visit these destinations for the first time and you are pleasantly surprised
to find the promotional material wasnt hype. Go back again, and you remember why you
wanted to go there in the first place.
When you are an award- winning golf resort, the tendency is to rest on
past laurels. Not so at The Cloister, a favorite spot for legions of vacationers since the
early 1900's. Situated on Sea Island, an ocean-side sliver of land adjacent to St. Simons
Island in the beautiful Brunswick Golden Isles off the southern Georgia coast, The Cloister takes
its lofty reputation very seriously and its board of directors will do nothing to
compromise it.
New and repeat visitors can expect the finest in accommodations and such
other amenities as its internationally award winning cuisine, health and fitness programs,
events and programs for kids, hiking and nature programs, horseback riding, fishing and,
oh yes, golf.
Speaking of golf, the last two years have been among the most
significant in the Sea Island Golf Clubs distinguished history. The resort and
private club have had a long and close affiliation. In October 98, The Plantation
Course opened to a warm reception. Noted U.S. Open course remodeler Rees Jones had spent
the previous 15 months melding two vintage 9's -- Retreat and Plantation -- into a
seamless 18-hole layout that brings out the best of the two courses woodland
features.
Not one to alter the courses merely for changes
sake, Jones enlarged lakes, added others, rebuilt bunkers and restored and improved the
greens to enhance the quality of the courses without undermining their design excellence.
He did, however, add two holes, #10 and #18, in large part to accommodate relocations of
the Golf Digest Academy and to create space for the new clubhouse, now under construction,
which will include 30 guest rooms and overlook the Frederica River estuary. The old
clubhouse will be used for special events.
The back 9's 425-yard lead-off hole of Plantation is as
scenic as it is daunting. From the tee box right next to the estuary and ocean beyond you
drive to an expansive fairway that lists left around a large lake to a slightly elevated
green overlooking the lake. From the tee and depending on the time of day, you might see a
long-line seiner coming in from the sea. The lake on #10 also serves as the beauty and the
beast for #12 and #18.
Hole 12 has one of the most interesting, challenging and
attractive green complexes youll ever play. The complex juts out into the lake and
the green is virtually surrounded by bunkers. With the river in the background, the view
makes you want to stop play and just savor it.
The finishing hole is a relatively short par 5 of some
500 yards, again with a green jutting out into the lake. It is a fine risk-reward hole
that requires a perfect second shot. Hit slightly left and the ball is wet, slightly right
and you wind up in a stretch of sand running from about 70 yards out on the right side of
the fairway all the way to the green.
With an excellent string of holes of varying lengths and
shapes woven through immaculately attended natural areas, golfers shouldnt tire of
this outstanding resort course. However, if they do, there is always Seaside right next to
it.
The new, revamped Seaside opened in October 1999 and is
a blend of the old Seaside 9 and Marshside. Designer Tom Fazio has preserved the core
routing of the Seaside 9 but altered the routing of all but a few holes on
Marshside. The
beautiful set of holes wrap around tidal marshes, and some holes on Seaside butt up
against the tidal flats. It is a windswept, seaside style course with lots of sand,
especially in the prodigious natural areas.
Marshside used to wind through stands of Palmetto trees,
but Fazio took most of them out to be consistent with the open, links features of Seaside.
He has created new lakes or enlarged existing ones and added or enlarged some bunkers. He
has also brought a few fairways closer to the lakes and lowered a few green complexes,
such as Seaside numbers 3 and 5. Once elevated and guarded by a cavernous bunker in front,
Seaside #5 green has been lowered and moved next to the tidal marsh.
On this par-70 6500-yard course, accuracy, not length,
is the key. It has two reachable par 5's, four moderate-length par 3's, and only three par
4's exceeding 400 yards. The greens feature subtle breaks but are not severely contoured.
For the time being at least, the golf club requires forecaddies to play this one.
On his third visit to The Cloister and the Sea Island
Golf Club, this visitor was not disappointed. In 1998, the club went entirely private,
restricting access to a small membership and Cloister guests. With less traffic,
completing two rounds in one day was no problem. The club maintains some of the highest
standards for service in the industry. Both courses are exceptionally clean and well
maintained by an army of workers, and the staff from the top down to the attendants are
gracious and helpful. For reservations call 1-800-SEA- ISLA.
_______________
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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