Grande Dunes, Farmstead,
Meadowlands, Myrtlewood
With over 120 courses to choose
from, finding fun and interesting places to play
golf in Myrtle Beach that are just right for
the uninitiated visitor can be quite daunting.
Not to worry. Grande Dunes, Farmstead, Meadowlands
and Myrtlewood (two courses) are at the top of
this reviewer’s recommended list. Owned
and/or managed by Burroughs & Chapin Golf
Management, they are among the most interesting
and best conditioned courses on the Grand Strand.
Grande Dunes Golf Club is
the centerpiece of a high-end
residential community that epitomizes luxury
living. Styled in Tuscan Mediterranean architecture
marked by its warm pastel colors, barrel roofs,
and large patios, the clubhouse and modest number
of gracious homes and rental accommodations complement
the golf course wonderfully and speak to a tasteful
restraint in developmental density, not always
evident elsewhere on the Strand .
The masterplanned community,
which
will include a 150-slip marina,
and a small commercial component, including shops
and a health and fitness center, sweeps across
2200 lush acres. Centrally located on Route 17
Bypass on the intercoastal waterway, the beautiful
natural tract seemed ideally suited for fine
golf and a quiet and elegant lifestyle.
Currently under construction on
the north end of the property is a private members-only
course designed by golf Hall-of-Famer Nick Price
and Craig Schreiner. It is scheduled to open
in the summer of 2005 and those familiar with
the site and routing say it is even more spectacular
than the resort course.
That is saying a lot. The resort
course, which opened in 2001, is designed by
Roger Rulewich, former lead architect with Robert
Trent Jones Sr. (RTJ) who spearheaded the design
of the famous Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail in
Alabama . Designer of numerous Top 100 courses
in the nation, Rulewich also redesigned The Dunes
Club in Myrtle Beach and two former PGA Championship
sites, Bellerive and Medinah.
The Grande Dunes resort course
has five sets of tees, ranging from 7618 to 5353
yards, and from the back is the longest course
on the Grand Strand. No fewer than seven holes
sit atop a bluff overlooking the intercoastal
waterway. A ravine traverses the course, offering
dramatic elevation changes.
Featuring Bermuda fairways and
bent grass tee boxes and greens, the course is
very user friendly, displaying extremely wide
fairways and large, modestly contoured greens.
This consistently fine design meanders around
and over streams and ponds and offers a couple
of forced carries over environmental areas. Even
so, the course is easily managed, provided players
play from the appropriate tees and avoid the
gnarly rough and numerous banks planted with
love grasses that frame many of the holes.
On a course with too many spectacular
holes to mention, the par 3 14 th hole stands
out as perhaps the most dramatic hole in Myrtle
Beach . At 244 yards from the back (158 from
the whites), this hole sits high above the waterway
and features an elevated tee box, a carry over
a steep ravine and a large-two-tiered green that
is wide but narrow from front to back. Fronted
by a large bunker, the green rises sharply from
the ravine and appears to be sitting on a shelf
with a dramatic fall-off down to the waterway.
Before teeing off on this gem, first-time players
will spend a few minutes pondering the challenge
and marveling at the beauty of this hole.
The course is served by a finely
maintained driving range and short-game practice
area that supports an active instructional program.
With its fine wood-paneled interior, the clubhouse
sports a restaurant with a first-class menu.
Grande Dunes
Tee time reservations: 888-886-8877
Real Estate: 877- 3 GRANDE
www.grandedunes.com
Farmstead and Meadowlands are
situated within a half mile of each other just
off Highway 57 in Calabash, NC. Because of their
relatively remote location, these courses tend
to attract a high percentage of local play and
not as much tourist traffic as the more centrally
located, more publicized courses on the Strand
. But golfers can translate these factors into
advantages. Take it to the bank. Both tracts
are worth playing.
Meadowlands and Farmstead are
the creation of owner W.J. McLamb, a prominent
construction magnate and land owner in Brunswick
County whose family settled there from Wilmington
during the Colonial period.
Farmstead can hold its own against
any course on the Strand .
It
is spectacular. It sits on a former tobacco farm
and is largely flat, but designer Willard Byrd
transformed the 480-acre site into a magnificent,
windswept course that has all the earmarks of
greatness.
The course fairly sprawls over
the seemingly boundaryless countryside, offering
a consistently interesting set of holes that
twist and turn around manmade ponds and through
occasional tree clusters. Most holes are isolated
from the others.
Farmstead gets a lot of publicity
mileage from its 767-yard par-6 finishing hole.
Granted it is quite memorable. After all, where
else on the Strand can you tee off in South Carolina
and putt out in North Carolina ?
But the 18 th at Farmstead should
not and does not take away from the quality of
the entire track. Farmstead is not gimmicky,
there are no goofy berms and other artificial
elements that might give the course a miniature
golf course-like flavor. Instead, each hole is
carefully crafted to be eminently playable with
largely flat fairways and medium-sized, modestly
sloped greens. Farmstead’s greatness is
that its design is understated. You finish your
round quietly and say later, “Wow, that
was a delightful course!”
Aside from the ballyhoo over the
finishing hole, Farmstead’s other signature
hole is the 192-yard 12 th over water and with
its multiple sets of tee boxes, allowing for
the hole to be set up in many different ways.
Equally outstanding is the 446-yard (392 whites)
2 nd hole, a superb dogleg right from a wooded
tee box around trees to a well guarded green.
A creek wanders through the trees along the right
side of this gem that usually plays into a prevailing
easterly wind.
As of 2004, no property use development
plan had been drawn up, leaving golfers the luxury
of playing a course in virtual seclusion on land
that has remained undisturbed for generations.
Farmstead Golf Links
866-six-parr
www.farmsteadgolflinks.com
Willard Byrd also put his indelible
stamp on Meadowlands, a course
ranging from 5041 to 7054 yards, that has parkland
features. The PUD calls for only 400 single-family
homes to be built in the complex GM
Mack Hood calls “pockets of development” in
a plan that is designed to preserve the course’s
secluded, pristine setting
Meadowlands is more heavily forested
than Farmstead
though
it would not be considered a predominantly wooded
track. Logically, meadows intersperse with pine
clumps, offering a rich natural background to
a course that has a modest number of lakes and
one or two slight elevations.
The front nine, as of 2004, had
no housing, and as a result, it offers a more
secluded setting on which Byrd designed some
truly beautiful holes, some of which are tree-lined.
Standing out among the nine is the 189-yard 8
th hole, secluded among pines with a lake in
front of the green and a front bunker with a
high lip that obscures a large section of the
green. Standing on the tee box in the quiet of
the morning, with only the sound of the breeze
and the warble of a bird, one could think he
or she was in golf heaven.
From Director of Golf Keith Farrell
on down, the stated goal of the staff at Meadowlands
is to make your round at Meadowlands so enjoyable
you will want to come back.
Meadowlands Golf Links
888-287-PLAY
www.meadowlandsgolf.com
Myrtlewood Golf Club
Conveniently located off 48 th
Avenue North just off Route 17 Bypass, Myrtlewood
Golf Club and Villas is close to the beach, restaurants
and to nearby entertainment including Broadway
at the Beach with its many amusements.
Myrtlewood
also offers excellent golf with two differently
styled courses, each of which is delightful,
fun and challenging. From the back tees, low
handicappers will have all they can handle and
from the forward markers, the weekend or vacationing
golfer will be tested but definitely not beat
up. Myrtlewood’s courses are ideal resort
courses for golfing families.
PineHills, ranging from 5692 to
6640 yards, was designed by famed architect Arthur
Hills and made Golf Digest’s Top Ten Courses
for Myrtle Beach in 1997. The course features
traditional architectural elements with rolling
fairways, undulating but fair greens, ubiquitous
water features and a few very slight elevation
changes. PineHills is not spectacular but it
is a course you could play over and over.
The Palmetto Course, designed
by Edmund Ault, has been a favorite of Grand
Strand golfers for over 25 years. It features
generous fairways lined with pine trees, large
greens and views of the intercoastal waterway.
Both courses are served by a clubhouse
with a restaurant that is open early for breakfast.
A large practice area is also available, as are
the many rental villas that line the perimeter
of the property.
Myrtlewood Golf Club
Tee times: 800-283-3633
www.myrtlebeachtrips.com
A leader in residential, commercial
and entertainment property development in Myrtle
Beach for over 100 years, Burroughs & Chapin
owns and manages Grande Dunes, Pine Lakes , and
Myrtlewood, and it manages Tidewater, Meadowlands
and Farmstead through its golf management division,
which was established in 2001.
For course conditions, it is always
a good idea to check ahead of your visit to see
if any of these courses are being aerated or
otherwise affected by on-going maintenance programs.
For Burroughs & Chapin real estate information,
call 843-448-5123 or check www.burroughschapin.com.