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Seabrook Island Resort
After Kiawah, I spent several days at Seabrook
Island, a mere 10 minutes drive from Kiawah. In important respects, Seabrook Island
mirrors Kiawah. It is a gated resort and residential community. The roads and trails are
clean and well-maintained. The small barrier island is rich in natural elements of thick
forest, lagoons and marshes copiously populated with wading birds and other wildlife. And,
the island has all the amenities of a first-class resort destination.
Seabrook, however, is entirely private. Use of
the amenities, including the golf courses, is restricted to private club members or resort
guests. Because of this, perhaps, I had a sense of community here that I dont
usually experience at resorts and I was struck by the friendliness of the staff, from
managers down to the attendants.
The resort has everything a fine beachfront
resort would have including camps and clubs for kids and conference and equestrian
centers. Also, with four-bedroom villas just off the beach and adjacent to the golf
clubhouse, the resort is nicely set up for golf outings.
Two adjacent golf courses are very scenic with
both woodland and links features. The easier of the two is Ocean Winds, a 6761-yard par 72
William Byrd design. It features generous fairways and relatively flat, moderately
bunkered greens. While the front nine works it sway around a woodland environment, the
fine back side wanders out toward the ocean and features some excellent
holes around lagoons and marshes. While fairly tame in calm weather, this course can be
difficult when the frequent winds kick up.
Crooked Oaks is a 6750-yard par 72 woodland
layout. It was one of Robert Trent Jones earliest creations and though it is quite narrow,
it doesnt have the deep, greenside bunkers or the roller coaster greens that were
later to become his trademarks. Still, Crooked Oaks is a real tester. Several major
amateur events have been held here and the winners have struggled to break even.
For more information and reservations, call
800-845-2475.
Wild Dunes Resort
The final leg of my Charleston visit took me to
Wild Dunes Resort on the Isle of Palms, a barrier island located east of the Mount
Pleasant section of Charleston. In 1989, the finger-shaped island took a direct hit from
Hurricane Hugo, wiping out virtually all of the islands vegetation. Ten years later,
this semi-tropical island is still recovering from Hugos wrath which left gaping
spaces where palms once presided.
Since Hugo, the island has been undergoing a
crash development program that has added thousands of new villas, apartment complexes, and
homes. Amidst this suburban atmosphere is a fine resort offering excellent beaches, beach
club, tennis club, a fitness center, two golf clubhouses serving each of two good Fazio
courses, and a variety of rental arrangements including The Boardwalk Inn, a small,
gracious five-story inn near the ocean that has an excellent restaurant with some of the
finest cuisine anywhere.
The two golf courses include the Harbor Course, a
6400 yard par 70 course that features six par threes and a lot of water and marsh.
In the frequent winds here, playing from the back is to invite disaster. Against the wind,
good players have to use long irons or even woods to reach the medium length par
threes. The relocation of the clubhouse after the hurricane created a somewhat
quirky course route with substantial distances between a few of the holes.
The resorts premier course is the Links
Course, a 6700 yard par 72 layout. Like the Harbor Course, it was built in the early
1980's, before Fazio evolved his trademark design features we know today. Still traces of
the Fazio touches are definitely here, and holes 15- 18 along Morgan Creek and the
Atlantic are a windy, scenic finish to an interesting track.
Like Kiawah and Seabrook, Wild Dunes offers the
advantage of being within a half hours drive of historic Charleston. Here
vacationers could exhaust at least several days touring preserved or restored Civil War
era buildings, forts, homes with beautiful gardens, plantations and museums. Charleston is
home to the internationally known Spoleto Festival U.S.A. each spring.
For more information and reservations, call
800-845-8880. 
_______________
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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