|
Royal Co. Down,
Royal Portrush | Portmarnock |
Royal Dublin | Druids Glen
The
K Club | Rosses Point, Enniscrone, Carne | Connemara | Ballybunion
Lahinch | Galway
Bay G&CC | Dooks, Dingle | Ring of Kerry | Waterville
Tralee | Killarney
| Old Head | Fota Island | Mt.
Juliet | Adare Manor & GC

Have you played any
of these courses? Send GolfLink a brief review and we'll publish it.
And Alan Nichols always appreciates your comments on his features. Contact info below.
Northern
Ireland: Two Royals
In Northern Ireland, there are two
courses that should be on any visitor's must-play list: Royal County Down and Royal
Portrush.
Royal
County Down
Royal County Down is regarded by many as THE most
beautiful golf course in the world. Tom Watson calls the front nine the best nine holes he
has ever played. The course hugs the sea and is in the small, Irish Sea-side village of
Newcastle, located about 30 miles south of Belfast.
Newcastle, with its tall church steeple and the
mammoth Mourne Mountains hanging over it like a sleeping bear, is picture postcard
beautiful. Many of County Down's holes offer this view to golfers who can easily get
distracted by the scenery when not otherwise engaged in looking for wayward shots. Imagine
yourself in a small boat in a storm-tossed sea with its deep crests and swales. County
Down is the terrestrial equivalent.
Royal County Down had its origins in 1889 when,
according to the minutes of the club founders' meeting, "The Secretaries were
empowered to employ Old Tom Morris to lay out the course at a cost not to exceed 4
Pds." In the 1920s, Irish Army Captain George Combe, with advice from the great Harry
Vardon added his own stamp, and it is Combe who is generally credited with bringing the
course to its current magnificence.
Morris and Combe, without benefit of today's
machinery, fashioned holes out of a rugged, sandy geography, never interfering with
nature's sculpting powers. County Down is a feast of great golf holes, starting with the
par 5 1st, requiring a drive to a treacherously narrow fairway, to the dog-leg par 5 18th,
a massive 560-yarder, often played into a prevailing wind. In between is a layout of
breathtaking beauty which, like the route of the Holy Grail, is paved with treachery in
the form of heather, gorse, whin bushes and a rough so thick with tall sea grass you will
often be praying to find your ball. All this makes for a fascinating and nervy golfing
experience.
Holes of particular note include the 473-yard par
4 3rd with its split-level fairway, the fairly short par-4 5th requiring an approach to a
green partially hidden by two tall sentinel-like mounds; the tiny, deceivingly difficult
130-yard 7th; the 486-yard par-5 9th (from this tee the view of the village and mountains
beyond is fabulous!), with its steeply rising and falling fairway that, if it were the sea
would be a surfer's delight; and the treacherously long, sharp dogleg par-4 12th which
Nick Faldo described as the best par-4 hole he has ever played.
Perhaps the best hole of all is the 217-yard par
4 4th. From a dramatically elevated tee (bring your pitons to get up to it), you must
carry a sea of gorse to a well-bunkered green backed by trees and tall grass. Behind you
on the tee box some 200 yards to the east is a sand dune that seems to rise to the sky.
Don't forget to take your camera.
Royal Portrush
You will also want your camera when you play the
Dunluce Course at Royal Portrush, a private club in the village of Portrush 50 miles north
of Belfast on the North Sea (the club's Valley Course is also excellent). While its tall
dunes give County Down a more tunnel-y feel, Portrush, with its sweeping terrain, has a
more open, expansive feel. It's the type of terrain where at any moment, Mary Poppins
could come skipping over the hill with her children in tow gathering wildflowers. From all
points, you can see for tens of miles up and down a magnificent coastline with a broad
beach that is the destination of many Irish vacationers. Inland are the green hills and
valleys that seem to go on forever in all directions. The course was named after Dunluce
Castle, visible from many points on the layout.
Portrush begins with a fairly short, easily
negotiable uphill par-4. But thats where her hospitality ends. From then on, golfers
face a mix of short and long holes that cavort over hill and down dale that require
patience, accuracy and at times length. On this course with its farmland like terrain,
each hole has its unique characteristics and flavor and no two holes are alike. The
signature hole is the 215-yard par 3 13th with a green perched directly on a 100-foot
precipice. The 14th is equally dramatic, requiring a drive to a tight fairway that drops
vertiginously to a small, undulating green. If it were snow-covered, this fairway would be
very popular with skiers and sledders.
As with all Irish links, the gorse and heather
bounding the fairways are wiry and thick. Often, the best escape, if you can get your club
on the ball at all, is to chip back out on the fairway.
In all, I found Portrush to be one of the
most enjoyable and interesting courses I have ever played. Royal Portrush is private, but,
like Ireland's other private clubs, access is usually not a problem with enough advance
notice and verification of your handicap.
Click on
Another Course Below to Continue:
NORTHERN IRELAND
Royal County Down, Royal Portrush
REPUBLIC OF IRELAND
DUBLIN AREA
Portmarnock Hotel & Golf Links and Portmarnock Golf Club
Royal Dublin
Golf Club | Druids
Glen Golf Club
The
K Club (Kildare Hotel & Country Club)
NORTH WEST
Rosses Point, Enniscrone, Carne
WEST AND SOUTHWEST
Connemara | Galway
Bay G&CC | Lahinch
| Ballybunion | Tralee
Dooks, Dingle | Ring of Kerry | Waterville
| Killarney
Old Head | Fota Island | Mt. Juliet | Adare Manor & GC

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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