PGA National Resort, Golf & Spa… Golfers, Don’t forget the Spa!

Angel Ashley descended upon me and invited me to to spa after the golf. Good idea!

Angel Ashley descended upon me and invited me to to spa after the golf. Good idea!

We are all creatures of habit, especially us male golfers, play 18 holes and head for the bar!

Not a bad option at the PGA National Resort & Spa with Bar 91, which is the 19th hole when you have five 18-hole golf courses to choose from. But maybe the bar can wait until after the spa?

I had the most fascinating, enjoyable and memorable visit to PGA National for the PGA of America Awards and Hall of Fame Induction Ceremonies. While there, my original plan was to venture past the festivities and the resort luxuries themselves to play golf on The Champion course which annually hosts the Honda Classic to kickoff the Florida Swing on the PGA TOUR.

CLICK here to learn how I discovered the “Spa after Golf Option” at PGA National

Some say I looked like a baked potato but I am not sure a baked potato ever felt this good!

Some say I looked like a baked potato but I am not sure a baked potato ever felt this good!

After finishing golf I was headed to you know where when I was craftily intercepted by Ashley Spurlock, the Spa Group Sales Manager. As you can see in the video, it really did not take much persuasion for me to change my trajectory and head over to the spa for the Muscle Melt treatment by a skillful therapist with the name of Krisann.

I had always wondered how professional golfers dealt with muscle soreness after playing so much golf in one week. If you are like me, the few times I have played four days in a row I was sore, especially when doing so these past few years. I guess I am getting older like everybody else and there are normal age-related issues I feel like everybody else.

Massages for me were always great but came with a period of time afterwards before I was completely refreshed, restored and recovered. The massage felt great but the result wasn’t that my muscles were ready to go play golf again. After having my first Muscle Melt that starts with my body being wrapped up and heated up with a soothing mixture of herbal liniment blended with aloe, I felt ready for another nine holes or for a night of dancing. Actually I did play another nine holes of golf but passed on the dancing. I bet if I had another Muscle Melt body treatment I could have danced the night away!

I was so excited about the new spa experience I almost forgot to tell you about the golf!

On the first tee at The Champion with Drew Weaver and Frosty. Only one of us is a true champion in golf and it is not me or Frosty!

On the first tee at The Champion with Drew Weaver and Frosty. Only one of us is a true champion in golf and it is not me or Frosty!

It was spectacular and would have been for the fun and friendship of playing with my buddy Frosty but we were paired with 2007 British Amateur Champion Drew Weaver. He finished 8th this year on the PGA TOUR Canada and is exempt into the final stage of Q-School which will be held on the Champion and Fazio courses at PGA National in early December.

CLICK here for a Video Interview with Drew Weaver, 2007 British Amateur Champion

That’s the thing about PGA National and The Champion course, with its long and exemplary history of competitive golf—the 1983 Ryder Cup won by the United States), the 1987 PGA Championship (won by Larry Nelson), and the Senior PGA Championship for 19 years, from 1982–2000. A 1981 George and Tom Fazio original, redesigned by Jack Nicklaus in 2002, The Champion became the home of The Honda Classic in 2007. In its short PGA TOUR history Ernie Els, Camilo Villegas and Rory McIlroy have won there.

Trapped in the Bear, I managed to par the 15th but then limped all the way to the safety and restoration of my spa body treatment.

Trapped in the Bear, I managed to par the 15th but then limped all the way to the safety and restoration of my spa body treatment.

In golf, one never knows who will be joining their foursome, but at PGA National it will likely be somebody good or entertaining or both as in our case. Either way you have a great golfing experience. The Champion course is like no other. To me it seems to ebb-and-flow, slowly and strategically revealing itself and challenging you up to and including the crescendo of the final four holes of the ‘Bear Trap’—the dramatic par-3 15th over water, the difficult par-4 16th, the more dramatic par-3 17th since the green is smaller and the end nearer and the exciting risk-reward par-5 18th home hole.

Technically, the last hole is not part of the televised ‘Bear Trap,’ but I think it should be. After all, who is safe from a bear until you have made it safely into the spa and are all wrapped up safe and warm?

The new sprawling iDECK overlooks the picturesque pool oasis.

The new sprawling iDECK overlooks the picturesque pool oasis. Photo Credit: PGA National

If you have ever visited the PGA National Resort & Spa or partied in the lobby during the Honda Classic then you know the resort is simply fabulous in all regards. The lobby deck overlooking the pool has been expanded to 3,000 square feet and is now called the iDeck. It is a great spot to watch the fireworks on Friday and Saturday nights at the Honda. The best in Palm Beach dining can be found in 12 on-site eating options including my favorites—The Ironwood Steak & Seafood restaurant and Bar 91. See, you can make it to the bar after the spa!

CLICK here for an earlier article on the accommodations at the PGA National Resort & Spa

The resort is spectacular, the golf no better anywhere else in the world and the spa is ideal for golfers coming off the golf course. Don’t wait for Ashley to track you down the next time you play golf at PGA National. Book the golf, the spa and the table at Ironwood!

Mister Golfer, look, the spa, the spa, the spa… don’t forget the spa!

PGA National Resort & Spa... a special place to go back to time and time again...

PGA National Resort & Spa… a special place to go back to time and time again…

Leap into the New Year & Celebrate Forever at the Omni Homestead Resort!

Many say that seeing the Tower upon their return to the Homestead is a wonderful feeling. Hard for me to imagine better than this first time I saw the Tower!

Many say that seeing the Tower upon their return to the Homestead is a wonderful feeling. Hard for me to imagine better than this first time I saw the Tower!

I was excited to visit the Omni Homestead Resort during the 2015 East Coast Golf Journey.

I knew the Homestead has been around for a long time, longer than golfing legend Sam Snead‘s time on this earth, but I never imagined it originated in 1766, ten years before the beginning of the United States of America.

Next year our country will celebrate the 40th anniversary of our 1976 bicentennial celebration. That’s 240 years of liberty. Next year the Omni Homestead Resort, will celebrate its Semiquincentennial, its 250th anniversary. And they are doing it in style with a celebration every day of the year. Even then it will be bigger than big since 2016 is a Leap Year and there will be one extra day to celebrate!

Why not leap into 2016 and celebrate forever at the Omni Homestead Resort?

Resident Historian Keene Byrd kicking off his two hour Homestead History Tour in the historic theatre.

Resident Historian Keene Byrd kicking off his two hour Homestead History Tour in the historic theatre.

My visit to America’s Resort was extraordinary! Many say that the thirty activities, ranging from the traditional—like golf and spa, to the unique—like falconry and a 13 waterfall Cascades Gorge walk, are the cherry on the cake at the Homestead. I have to disagree. Resident Historian Keene Byrd’s two-hour magical mystery history tour that takes you through those nearly 250 years of history to the days of Thomas Jefferson visits to the Homestead was the golf ball upon my tee. Truly an exciting and amazing trek figuratively through American history and literally through a grand old, yet modern, resort.

On the historic First Tee of the 1892 Old Course with Assistant PGA Golf Professional Justin Doyle.

On the historic First Tee of the 1892 Old Course with Assistant PGA Golf Professional Justin Doyle.

Being a golf and travel diary I can’t help but mention the thrilling range of golfing experiences available at the Omni Homestead Resort. With Donald Ross’ 1892 Old Course literally outside your door to the William S. Flynn 1923 Cascades Golf Club just a couple of Sam Snead drives down the valley, golf and competitive golf, as Bobby Jones would say can all be found right where Snead first came to the game he would dominate as a young lad of 17 making hickory-shafted golf clubs outside the Casino Building.

Slammin’ Sammy Snead turned professional at the age of 22 when he became the very first Golf Professional at the Cascades Golf Club in 1934. The next year the tour came to the Cascades Course and he nearly won it after leading by three strokes after two rounds. Still single at the time, a lady by the name of Mildred ‘Babe’ Didrickson became the first girl ever to enter a men’s open event according to the local newspaper. She would go on to become the first and only woman to date to make the cut in a regular PGA TOUR event ten years later in the L.A. Open. Sam Snead would go on to win 185 times including a record 82 PGA TOUR victories.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Justin Doyle, Assistant PGA Golf Professional

A Keene Golfer & Historian teeing off 'Carry On,' the 210-yard par 3 5th hole at the Cascades.

A Keene Golfer & Historian teeing off ‘Carry On,’ the 210-yard par 3 5th hole at the Cascades.

As Justin points out in his interview, there is a legacy of longtime local Golf Professionals at the Homestead going back to Sam Snead. Director of Golf Don Ryder recently retired after 40-plus years at the Homestead. His cousin and replacement Barry Ryder has served the members and guests at the Homestead for over 30 years. The Head Golf Professional at the Cascades is Mark Fry and he has been working at the Homestead for 20-plus years. Justin is the young pup with 12 years. I could go on and on about their competitive golf careers too but suffice it to say Sam Snead’s legacy of being a pro’s pro and a member’s pro too continues on in the sloped valleys of the Allegheny Mountains in western Virginia.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with the Homestead Resident Historian Keene Byrd

The Sam Snead plaque on the first tee of the Cascades Course—"if you can play the Cascades, you can play anywhere."

The Sam Snead plaque on the first tee of the Cascades Course—”if you can play the Cascades, you can play anywhere.”

I so liked the historical tour and the historian that conducted it that I convinced Keene to join me for a round at the Cascades. There is no better way to thoroughly become knowledgeable about the history of a golf course than to play a round with the resident historian. I forgot to ask the unstumpable human Homestead encyclopedia who hit the very first tee shot off America’s oldest First Tee in continuous operation on the Old Course. I did take note of the Sam Snead plaque with his assertion that “if you can play the Cascades, you can play anywhere,” any remembered to question Keene after we finished putting on the 18th green. So when are we going to play the Augusta National Golf Club? Hey, I played the Cascades and Mr. Snead said if I did than I could play anywhere!

CLICK here for a HIGHLIGHT VIDEO of Keene Byrd Describing Sam Snead’s Vertical Leap at Age 65

With Lee Perry, a friendly, knowledgeable and extremely generous 35-year part of the Homestead Family.

With Lee Perry, a friendly, knowledgeable and extremely generous 35-year part of the Homestead Family.

I would be remiss if I didn’t include my interactions with Lee Perry, one of the outside golf operations guy at the Cascades. Like the golf professionals, the golf staff, as well as the resort staff, have many longtime employees. I don’t even think they call them employees at the Homestead, they just call them and treat them like family which is the way I felt they treated me. Three amigos greeted me at the Cascades Golf Club—Lee with 35 years of service, Loren with 26, and Scott the young pup only in his second year. I could have hung out with them for days but then would have never completed the seven-week East Coast Golf Journey. Actually that is my fear of finding a home and never leaving and the Homestead could likely be the place. I think that is where the name comes from.

Lee's autographed 1999 cover of Virginia Golfer with 87-year old Slammin' Sam, the Golfer for the Ages.

Lee’s autographed 1999 cover of Virginia Golfer with 87-year old Slammin’ Sam, the Golfer for the Ages.

Lee was a good buddy of Sam for a long time. The kind of buddy that could stop by his ranch, just open the front door and yell “anybody home?” In fact over the years he took a few guests along with him to meet the golfing legend. Quoted in many articles and books on Sam (this one included), I should have taken better notes and written a book of my own. I do remember one story where Sam played in a Ryder Cup across the Big Pond and caught a four-pound bass while waiting on the 18th tee to finish off a match. Probably the only one to do so in history and win a point for the old country too.

Old Snead Links, the family farm where Sam Snead lived and is now at rest a mile or two down a country road from the Cascades Course.

Old Snead Links, the family farm where Sam Snead lived and is now at rest a mile or two down a country road from the Cascades Course.

I stopped by the Cascades the next morning on my way out of town to say good bye to Lee and the boys and thank them for making my visit so enjoyable and this article so easy to write. Lee had brought in the program and a pairing sheet from the 1988 United States Amateur contested on the Cascades Course and won by Eric Meeks. Also, a signed scorecard from Sam’s 80th Birthday Celebration and Golf Tournament in 1992. Plus the Summer 2002 issue of Virginia Golfer with Sam and “Golf Misses You Mr. Snead” on the cover. For me? You gotta be kidding. I do have pandering limits my friends and insisted Lee keep the signed 80th birthday magazine cover.

Meeting Mimi Byrd Kyser at Sam Snead's Tavern before I knew she was Keene's sister!

Meeting Mimi Byrd Kyser at Sam Snead’s Tavern before I knew she was Keene’s sister!

Speaking of the family feeling of the Homestead the first night I was there I walked over to Sam Snead’s Tavern which is part of the Omni operation but located just off property across the Main Street (Sam Snead Highway) in Hot Springs. It was late so I caught them at closing time. Knowing I was interested in the memorabilia a nice lady named Mimi  turned all the lights back on so I could take pictures, downstairs and upstairs. Turned out she is Keene’s sister. When Keene mentioned the possibility of meeting Sam’s son Samuel Jackson Snead Jr. a.k.a Jackie at the Tavern we made plans to meet there for dinner at 7 pm. Unfortunately I arrived a few minutes late and Jackie had left early for another engagement so I missed meeting him but dinner with Keene with Mimi behind the bar was tasty and fun. One missed opportunity out of a dozen direct hits, all the more reason to return to the Omni Homestead Resort on next year’s East Coast Golf Journey.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Lynn Swann, Director of Communications & Marketing

Group selfie with Lynn on the East Wing. I can only imagine the view from the top of the Tower!

Group selfie with Lynn on the East Wing. I can only imagine the view from the top of the Tower!

Enough of the golf, it is fabulous, you know that. I can tell you the resort experience is fabulous too! I love staying in historic places in historic rooms that are comfortable, functional and luxurious in a modern sense. My room was perfect and room service that first night was better than 90% of the restaurants I have been to in my life. The presidential suite in the East Wing that Lynn showed me was well the difference between me and a president. Speaking of presidents, twenty-two have visited the Homestead and their portraits line the walls of The Lobby Bar. I enjoyed the Breakfast Buffet in the Main Dining Room and it was overwhelmingly scrumptious!

In terms of luxurious resorts and historical golfing experiences, set amid nature at its finest, the Omni Homestead Resort is a must do for sure. Why not leap into 2016 and celebrate forever at the Omni Homestead Resort? I hope to be right there with you!

In literally the same spring spa as Thomas Jefferson was way back in the late 1700s!

In literally the same spring spa as Thomas Jefferson was way back in the late 1700s!

Amazing breakfast buffet in the main dining room.

Amazing breakfast buffet in the main dining room.

Jackie the Omelette Lady! Everyone is smiling at the Homestead.

Jackie the Omelette Lady! Everyone is smiling at the Homestead.

With Keene Byrd the Historian...

With Keene Byrd the Historian…

With Keene Byrd, the Gofler...

With Keene Byrd, the Gofler…

There you have it—golf & the resort—time to leap into 2016 and celebrate forever at the Omni Homestead Resort!

There you have it—golf & the resort—time to leap into 2016 and celebrate forever at the Omni Homestead Resort!

 

 

 

Enjoy the Mountains of North Carolina at High Hampton Inn & CC

Hello High Hampton Inn!

Hello High Hampton Inn!

The High Hampton Inn & CC in Cashiers, North Carolina is a place for all the seasons of our lives—as families with children, young adults with a romantic inclination, singles who are adventurists with an outdoors and sport mindset, such as I, and couples returning with their adult children and grandchildren to celebrate life up in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

I absolutely loved my visit as much for the people I met and the hikes I took, as for the golf and spa activities.

This is home, no cell phones, computers or air conditioning but who needs them, it's family and personal restorative time in the mountains!

This is home, no cell phones, computers or air conditioning but who needs them, it’s family and personal restorative time in the mountains!

The moment I came on property, seeing the tall hedges and driving through a bit of the golf course, then arriving at what can only be called a large resort estate, I immediately felt at home and knew I was in for a unique, relaxing and fun stay. Though I walked up the front steps it felt as though I was skipping up them with teenage excitement. I noticed the National Register of Historic Places plaque mounted outside on the North American chestnut bark siding. Then I opened the door and voila, the lobby lodge said ‘hello, welcome and make yourself at home’ all in one gaze.

I received a warm handshake and friendly welcome from Mark Jones!

I received a warm handshake and friendly welcome from Mark Jones!

I was indeed home and personally welcomed by Mark Jones, a previous General Manager, now a local elected official and the High Hampton Historian. He grew up here and never wanted to leave the mountains or the resort where there are fifth-generation guests and third-generation everybody else. Mark tells the story like you were present years ago when Wade Hampton came upon the property in the early 19th century, when the McKee family took ownership and started hosting guests in 1922, and  how Will Jr. and his wife Becky have carried on and added to the traditions created by his grandfather E.L. McKee and father William Sr.

The 166-yard par-3 8th hole has a near island green in Lake Hampton and a gorgeous view of Rock Mountain.

The 166-yard par-3 8th hole has a near island green in Lake Hampton and a gorgeous view of Rock Mountain.

I like the story of how Will’s grandfather hired J. Victor East, a contemporary of the great Bobby Jones, to build a golf course. After 11 holes were completed, he presented a bill that exhausted the budget so E.L. stopped construction. East countered, stating there has never been an 11 hole golf course and E.L. responded saying that there is one now! The sand greens were converted to grass greens and an additional seven holes designed by famed architect George W. Cobb were added to complete the sporty, beautiful and fun-to-play golf course that is present today.

CLICK here for a Video Interview with Historian Mark Jones

With Laura & Barbara, part of the Hap Chandler & Gaynor Screven Fan Club at High Hampton Inn.

With Laura & Barbara, part of the Hap Chandler & Gaynor Screven Fan Club at High Hampton Inn.

Like any family, the people whether on staff or guests at the resort, are what fill our vacations with pleasure and interesting interactions. I was thrilled to meet Hap Chandler, who was born in 1921, and has been coming to High Hampton since age 14 in 1934 for the fried chicken on Sunday. He was enjoying the beautiful day with his lady friend Ms. Gaynor Screven of Birmingham, Alabama and his two daughters Laura and Barbara.  Hap and Gaynor make a loving couple and I don’t think I have met two nicer people in the whole world. Meet them for yourself in this interview:

CLICK here to meet 94-young Hap Chandler

CLICK here for Hap & Gaynor’s Love Story

A table with a view of Hampton Lake and Rock Mountain. Dining at High Hampton can be as intimate as you like it to be.

A table with a view of Hampton Lake and Rock Mountain. Dining at High Hampton can be as intimate as you like it to be.

If you want to feel young again and get in touch with yourself, friends, relatives or a lover, the High Hampton Inn is the place to go. It is just different, so you are different. There is no air conditioning, internet or electronic gadgets to discharge you so you get recharged. The climate outside and the climate inside are conducive to pure connection, entertainment and fun. Meals in the Main Inn are intimate, delicious and nourishing. Sportcoat attire with ties on Friday and Saturday nights make the dining experience an event as special as the cuisine itself.

I made it to the top of Rock Mountain! What a spectacular view of the High Hampton Inn and its surrounding 1400 acres!

I made it to the top of Rock Mountain! What a spectacular view of the High Hampton Inn and its surrounding 1400 acres!

I took a hike each day, the first was a little over four miles up to Rock Mountain, the second was a little over three miles up to Chimney Top. Both were spectacular and somewhat challenging to this aging, Florida flatland golfer but easily doable. Nature along the well-marked and maintained trails and the view from above were spectacular. There is something about hiking a trail for the first time and the feeling of wellness, even though a bit fatigued you don’t feel it, when you are standing atop a mountain and looking down from where you came from. There is no more beautiful country than the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina!

CLICK here for a Video Interview with General Manager Clifford Mears

Relaxed after the spa treatment for the pedicure. Nice to be pampered after golf and a hike!

Relaxed after the spa treatment for the pedicure. Nice to be pampered after golf and a hike!

GM Clifford Mears tells it like the High Hampton Inn delivers—simplicity, a place to get unplugged and reconnected with what is important in life—family, friends, nature and yourself. He’s right about the beauty, the safe environment for families and the fantastic choice of amenities. I went to the Hampton Health Club & Spa for a therapeutic deep tissue massage and pedicure. Both were awesome. They certainly fulfilled their promise to “deliver peace and relaxation in a sanctity of nature.”

Whatever the season, the High Hampton Inn in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains is a piece of heaven for sure. Why not come and experience life as it ought to be and can be for you, family and friends at the High Hampton Inn in Cashiers, North Carolina, only a few hours from Atlanta.

I am happy I did!

Finding the entrance to High Hampton Inn is like finding a Secret Door to Heaven!

Finding the entrance to High Hampton Inn is like finding a Secret Door to Heaven!

High Hampton Inn is on the National Register of Historic Places.

High Hampton Inn is on the National Register of Historic Places.

My room took me back comfortably to another era in time.

My room took me back comfortably to another era in time.

With my new friends Bill, Karen & Margaret. Without outside distractions it is easy to have conversations and make new friends!

With my new friends Bill, Karen & Margaret. Without outside distractions it is easy to have conversations and make new friends!

View of Rock Mountain from Chimney Top. Two good hikes, let me know how you liked them!

View of Rock Mountain from Chimney Top. Two good hikes, let me know how you liked them!

High Hampton Inn is a resort that has everything, including golf!

High Hampton Inn is a resort that has everything, including golf!

Charlottesville’s Keswick Hall has History, Personality, & Golf to Dye for!!!

Communications Manager & Resident Historian Patricia Castelli has thoroughly researched the history of Keswick Hall and written a book about it.

Communications Manager & Resident Historian Patricia Castelli has thoroughly researched the history of Keswick Hall and written a book about it.

Came across a gem today outside Charlottesville, Virginia called Keswick Hall! Interviewed Resident Historian Patricia Castelli (property dates back to 1912) and PGA Head Golf Professional Eric McGraw today. Playing the new Pete Dye design that opened last fall tomorrow morning! Excited to say the least.   (Facebook Post with 7 pics, Andy Reistetter, 9-8-15)

Full Cry is the name of the golf course! Not a fox hunter but sure I will be crying fully and loudly tomorrow!

Keswick Hall dates back to 1912 when it was know as the Villa Crawford.

Communications Manager & Resident Historian Patricia Castelli has thoroughly researched the history of Keswick Hall and written a book about it.

PGA Head Golf Professional Eric McGraw's father worked for Ben Hogan and he works for the man who bought the AMF/Ben Hogan Company Bill Goodwin.

PGA Head Golf Professional Eric McGraw’s father worked for Ben Hogan and he works for the man who bought the AMF/Ben Hogan Company Bill Goodwin.

PGA Head Golf Professional Eric McGraw’s father worked for Ben Hogan and he works for the man who bought the AMF/Ben Hogan Company Bill Goodwin.

This is a 5-star luxury hotel with an infinity pool.

Where the infinity pool ends, golf on the Pete Dye designed Full Cry golf course begins!

A links-like Pete Dye design… intriguing to say the least…

This is a 5-star luxury hotel with an infinity pool.

This is a 5-star luxury hotel with an infinity pool.

Where the infinity pool ends, golf on the Pete Dye designed Full Cry golf course begins!

Where the infinity pool ends, golf on the Pete Dye designed Full Cry golf course begins!

A links-like Pete Dye design... intriguing to say the least...

A links-like Pete Dye design… intriguing to say the least…

Keswick Hall dates back to 1912 when it was know as the Villa Crawford.

Keswick Hall dates back to 1912 when it was know as the Villa Crawford.

Full Cry is the name of the golf course! Not a fox hunter but sure I will be crying fully and loudly tomorrow!

Full Cry is the name of the golf course! Not a fox hunter but sure I will be crying fully and loudly tomorrow!

BEST Ticket for THE PLAYERS includes Playing Dye’s Valley!

THE PLAYERS starts with the Military Celebration and Concert on Tuesday night on the back lawn of the Clubhouse.

THE PLAYERS starts with the Military Celebration and Concert on Tuesday night on the back lawn of the Clubhouse.

We are down to the last night before the world gets fixated on the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass for the 42nd rendition of THE PLAYERS Championship! If you are lucky enough to be in Ponte Vedra Beach there are plans to be made. Which players to follow, where is the best location to be a spectator or if you are even more lucky, choosing which corporate hospitality tent to stop by? Or should I just hang out in Nineteen in the Clubhouse? I took a close look and came up with five spectator tips for THE PLAYERS.

 

CLICK here for Andy’s Top 5 Spectator Tips for THE PLAYERS Championship!

But what is the ULTIMATE PLAYERS Ticket?

In my opinion, the ultimate PLAYERS ticket is to do all of the above for the entire week and play the Dye Valley Course after THE PLAYERS. There are tee times available here for Tuesday, May 12th.

Watch golf at the Stadium Course but be sure to play golf at the Valley!

Watch golf at the Stadium Course but be sure to play golf at the Valley!

You may not realize it but the Dye Valley Course has hosted some great golf competitions of its own. Golf history made on the Valley include two Senior Players Championship and three Web.com tournaments. Since 2013 the Valley has become the permanent home of the Web.com Tour Championship. Dye’s other creati0n at TPC Sawgrass is an ongoing Fountain of Youth quenching the thirst for young talent on the PGA TOUR with champions like Russell Henley, Derek Fathauer and Chesson Hadley.

Milan Moore, Dye's Valley Project Manager making the rounds as the restoration neared completion.

Milan Moore, Dye’s Valley Project Manager making the rounds as the restoration neared completion.

From an amateur golfer’s perspective the Valley is a guaranteed playground in great shape. Last year’s course renovation was completed in time for the September Playoff Finale. The project, managed by Milan Moore, a course designer in the PGA TOUR Design Services Group, restored the greens to their original size (roughly 30% larger) with a change to Bermuda TifEagle grass (which the Stadium will change to after THE PLAYERS this year). The fairways and tees were changed to Celebration Bermuda, following the recent change on the Stadium. With a new irrigation and drainage systems installed, the course is now available in prime condition even if it happens to rain a little before your tee time.

CLICK here for a Video Interview with Lucas Andrews, Dye’s Valley Golf Course Superintendent.

With Lucas Andrews, Golf Course Superintendent in John Deere Land at TPC Sawgrass.

With Lucas Andrews, Golf Course Superintendent in John Deere Land at TPC Sawgrass.

Lucas Andrews, the Golf Course Superintendent for Dye’s Valley at TPC Sawgrass, is the guy that creates the “firm and fast” conditions for the Web.com Tour Championship. With five years experience at TPC Sawgrass he commands the army of John Deere equipment during championship week in September. Educated in Canada, Lucas was at The Old Course in St. Andrews for a year-long internship before coming to TPC Sawgrass. His favorite time on the Valley is early in the morning or late in the evening when the low sun highlights all the bumps and hollows. Here is a guy that has come from the ‘Home of Golf’ to the ‘Home of THE PLAYERS.’

CLICK here for a Video Interview with Brian Riddle, Resident Golf Professional at TPC Sawgrass.

Brian Riddle, Golf Professional resides at TPC Sawgrass, Home of the PLAYERS on the Stadium and The Web.com Championship on Dye's Valley.

Brian Riddle, Golf Professional resides at TPC Sawgrass, Home of the PLAYERS on the Stadium and The Web.com Championship on Dye’s Valley.

Brian Riddle, the Resident Golf Professional at TPC Sawgrass, is a lover of the game of golf and working at TPC Sawgrass. His Dad put a golf club in his hand as a young child and after playing junior and high school golf he tried to walk on at UNC Wilmington. While not successful as a competitive golfer he turned to the business side of golf  After earning his Business Management degree, he went to NC State and graduated from the Professional Golf Management program. His favorite hole on the Valley is the dogleg right No. 6 (Tournament No. 15) with water all the way down the right hand side. Brian has an interesting title and he laughed when I asked him if he lives at the Clubhouse. I think he does.

Enjoy THE PLAYERS this year and play Dye’s Valley! You will be happy you did!

Penn State has Happy Valley, we have Dye's Fun Valley! With John Anderson, Dennis Berkholtz and Stokes Hill (L to R).

Penn State has Happy Valley, we have Dye’s Fun Valley! With John Anderson, Dennis Berkholtz and Stokes Hill (L to R).

 

 

 

 

Modern & Historic; Mission Inn is Orlando’s Top Golf Resort

Partial view of the Mission Inn Resort from the 'Devils' Delight' 17th green on El Campeon.

Partial view of the Mission Inn Resort from the ‘Devils’ Delight’ 17th green on El Campeon.

You can tell a golf resort by its golf courses. If there is only one, then it really isn’t a resort, rather more of a private estate for the owner to entertain her or his friends. When there are two then it is a golf resort for sure, but what kind? Are they mirror images of each other or stately and unique in their own right? At Mission Inn Resort & Club there are two golf courses—El Campeon and Los Colinas and there is no doubt that they are stately and unique in their own right!

El Campeon, a.k.a. The Champion, is the preserver of golf history in the Southeast United States. While not the oldest course in Florida it is old and dates back to 1917. This unusual Florida golf course with significant elevation changes captures the essence of the early years of golf design in America. The Los Colinas course, a.k.a. The Hills, is relatively new and brings into play all the latest modern design principles. Together, the historic and modern golf courses make Mission Inn, located in Howey-in-the Hills, the Orlando area’s top golf resort, if not in the entire state of Florida.

Fountain in the Plaza de Las Palmas at Mission Inn Resort.

Fountain in the Plaza de Las Palmas at Mission Inn Resort.

This was an exciting “stay and play” adventure for a number of reasons.  First of all, I have heard about the Mission Inn ever since I moved to Florida in 2008. The location, “Howey-in the Hills” always intrigued me as well—hills in flat Florida? Who-the-heck is Howey and why is he in the hills? Plus I was part of a large group of golfing buddies.

The trip was scheduled right after the annual PGA Merchandise Show at the Orange County Convention Center and the majority, if not all, of the media gathered at the Mission Inn Resort & Club were fellow Golf Travel Writers Association (GTWA) members. Mission Inn is so close to Orlando you could almost golf your way there. It was easy to close the PGA Show at 3 pm, drive to Mission Inn and check in, take a nap and join the Welcome Event in time for dinner at the Lakeside Pavilion with time to spare.

The Mission Inn Resort and El Campeon is part of Florida's Historic Golf Trail.

The Mission Inn Resort and El Campeon is part of Florida’s Historic Golf Trail.

GTWA folks are special and I need them in my life so maybe I am a special needs person in life after all.  What they found at the “Granddaddy of All Golf Shows” and their stories about their finds were wonderful and beneficial to hear about. I am not saying I am the youngest member of GTWA but I probably am and who better to learn from than folks who have been going to a show for twenty or thirty years longer than you have? As long as I stayed away from their one-putt on-course golf betting scam (you know the one where they always just miss the green and get it up-and-down to take your money), I knew I would have a great time at Mission Inn.

Los Colinas, designed by Gary Koch, opened in 1992 to rave reviews.

Los Colinas, designed by Gary Koch, opened in 1992 to rave reviews.

George O’Neil, the famous Chicago golf professional and architect, was employed to design El Campeon at a time when golf resorts were just emerging In the United States. O’Neil was also a golf instructor and helped develop the skills of the great amateur golfer Chick Evans. Hiring O’Neil was a bold and provocative decision at the time and sent the message that nothing but the best is good enough at the Mission Inn Resort & Club. This message continues today nearly one hundred years later.

Los Colinas has a storied, yet shorter, design history. Gary Koch, the acclaimed amateur and professional golfer turned golf broadcaster and course designer created the original design in 1992. It was an instantaneous hit and was nominated as the “Best New Resort Course” by Golf Digest. Ron Garl, a prolific designer of golf courses in Florida and around the world updated the layout in 2007.

Like so many dual coursed resorts, El Campeon and Los Colinas are the perfect complement to each other and a purely passionate place to play golf.

Golf groups, like PJ Vandewalle, keep coming back year-after-year to the Mission Inn Resort.

Golf groups, like PJ Vandewalle, keep coming back year-after-year to the Mission Inn Resort.

Our GTWA gathering was like a corporate meeting or convention with the agenda, logistics and operation professionally orchestrated by Drew Toth (Director, Sales & Marketing) and Bud Beucher (Vice President/General manager). While celebrating 50 years of Beucher family ownership and creating a “Lifetime of Memories” it is easy to see why groups like the PJ Vanderwalle Golf Group came back year-after-year and were celebrating their 20th year anniversary at Mission Inn. Maybe you have an association of family members or folks in your company that could enjoy a ‘stay and play’ experience at the Mission Inn Resort & Club?

“Blessed by nature, touched by history,” I certainly agree. Family owned and operated, there is a strong sense of home when one visits.

Even Debra's osprey family comes back each year to the Mission Inn Resort!

Even Debra’s osprey family comes back each year to the Mission Inn Resort!

Who is Howey? William J. Howey is the entrepreneur who purchased 60,000 acres, including the grounds of Mission Inn, to grow citrus fruits and ship Florida sunshine around the country. In 1917 it was he who hired O’Neil to build El Campeon and diversified his business. Nick Buecher, an adventurist, who rode horseback across Mexico after recuperating from broken leg suffered in a rodeo tumble bought the operation in 1964 and expanded to what it is today. Celebrating 50 years of family ownership is quite an accomplishment!

The question isn’t why Howey and Buecher were in the Hills, the question is why you are not? Whether a private or corporate endeavor, the place to endeavor is Mission Inn Resort & Club with its two golf courses, 176 hotel rooms, Lakeside Pavilion, fresh-water fishing, marina, full-service spa, Billiard Room, three restaurants and 30,000 square feet of group space for meetings, weddings and special events.

Here's a citrus toast to the Beucher Family and the Mission Inn Resort celebrating 50 years! Thanks for having me!

Here’s a citrus toast to the Beucher Family and the Mission Inn Resort celebrating 50 years! Thanks for having me!

My GTWA buddies and I had a wonderful time at the Mission Inn Resort & Club. I even received a gift of homemade Ma Poole’s Chutney from John Dyson. Just in time for the Super Bowl party back in Ponte Vedra Beach, the chutney was as big a hit as our time at Mission Inn.

Modern and historic, with a strong sense of family, for personal or corporate events and outings, Mission Inn has it all to not only offer but to deliver. Check it out next time you are anywhere near Orlando and you won’t be disappointed in any way. In fact unless you are staying there for a week or more you won’t experience it all and will want to make a visit to the Mission Inn Resort & Club an annual affair.

Here are six more memories from a fantastic visit to the Mission Inn Resort & Club:

The grandeur of the Mission Inn Resort is found in every vista!

The grandeur of the Mission Inn Resort is found in every vista!

The classic par-4 5th hole on El Campeon with part of the Mission Inn Resort in the background.

The classic par-4 5th hole on El Campeon with part of the Mission Inn Resort in the background.

On the par-5 5th on Los Colinas. A beautiful walk through the hills hitting that little white ball!

On the par-5 5th on Los Colinas. A beautiful walk through the hills hitting that little white ball!

Lots of golf memorabilia displayed at the Mission Inn Resort. I liked this cabinet commemorating Gary Koch's career.

Lots of golf memorabilia displayed at the Mission Inn Resort. I liked this cabinet commemorating Gary Koch’s career.

Autographed scorecard from the original opening of Las Colinas in 1992.

Autographed scorecard from the original opening of Las Colinas in 1992.

With our host Drew Toth, Director, Sales & Marketing at the Mission Inn Resort.

With our host Drew Toth, Director, Sales & Marketing at the Mission Inn Resort.

 

 

A Mystical Myrtle Beach Golf Vacation, Courtesy of the Wizard—Claude Pardue

Blowing out my birthday candle was as easy as a Mystic Golf vacation to Myrtle Beach!

Blowing out my birthday candle was as easy as a Mystic Golf vacation to Myrtle Beach!

Another birthday to celebrate is no big deal. Celebrating it in Mrytle Beach, playing the three Mystical Golf masterpieces, is a big deal! All courtesy of the Wizard himself, Mr. Claude Pardue via the Golf Travel Writers Association (GTWA). Staying at the ocean front Sea Mist, drving out to one of the terrific trifecta turf tracts—The Witch, The Wizard and Man O’War, dining with the Divine Dining Group, and celebrating love of country and freedom at the Alabama Theatre, with friends, was one heck of a birthday celebration! I am no Dorothy, I didn’t want to go home to Florida, but maybe Claude Pardue is really a wizard?

A baby alligator with a witch-like evil eye kept a close eye on me as I did him while looking for one of my errant

A baby alligator with a witch-like evil eye kept a close eye on me as I did him while looking for one of my errant tee shots.

The Witch was Mystic Golf’s first entry into the Myrtle Beach golf market. As with the other two, this eerie and fun-to-play golf course was designed by golf course architect Dan Maples. Based in Pinehurst, North Carolina, the Maples family golf heritage goes all the way back to 1895 when Frank Maples worked with famed Scottish designed Donald Ross. Claude took his time “looking for land that we could build something magical with,” and found it be carving out 500 acres of a 23,000 acre natural South Carolina swamp. Though the routing of both nines is clockwise, they never intersect and the golfing at The Wizard is a meandering through beautiful and pleasantly wide enough holes with nature so close you feel a part of it. The cypress knee stumps you see from the bridges through the swamp areas become the tee markers upon arrival at the next hole. A solid, fun and engaging golf course for all skill levels and not to be missed on Halloween!

The 14th and 15th island greens with the island 15th tee in between on the Man O' War.

The 14th and 15th island greens with the island 15th tee in between on the Man O’ War.

Where Pardue and Maples had to bridge over the waters at The Witch, they created a massive 100 acre lake and built The Wizard and Man O’War across from each other in a 48,000 acre International Paper timber forest. The dirt they carved out to make the namesake Portuguese Man O’ War at home with water on all 18 holes was used for challenging sight blocking hillocks on the Scottish Wizard links. This shift of sand makes both golf courses challenging for golfers of various temperaments and ball-striking abilities. Though the smooth and true bentgrass greens allow for fun and scoring once your ball lands safely on the green. Also intriguing in the use of water on the Man O’War are back-to-back island greens on the par-5 14th and par-3 15th. The golfer is playing well to score level par of fours on those two holes let alone the entire 18 holes.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Claude Pardue, President & CEO of Mystic Golf.

Claude Pardue (center) welcoming the golf writers and their guests to another Mystic Golf celebration in Myrtle Beach.

Claude Pardue (center) welcoming the golf writers and their guests to another Mystic Golf celebration in Myrtle Beach.

If you have met Claude Pardue you know he is an affable character in the golf business. If there was a Golf Character Hall of Fame he would be in there with the likes of George S. May and Danny Thomas. May was the first to broadcast golf nationally on television, in 1953 from the Tom O’Shanter Golf Course in Chicago. He was rewarded when Lew Worsham holed his approach shot on the final hole for an eagle two to win by one stroke. Danny Thomas, of course, fulfilled a “starving actor” vow that  “no child should die in the dawn of life” when he founded the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

Maybe they would call it the Golf Hall of Big Hearts? Claude is not really a golfer and has an interesting story of how he came to own three of the top tier and most successful golf courses in Myrtle Beach, the Golf Capital of the World. Of course I, along with the other Andrew the Saint, have a problem with that, not Claude but the Myrtle Beach moniker. I think Ponte Vedra Beach is the Golf Capital of the World with the PGA TOUR and THE PLAYERS Championship here and the World Golf Hall of Fame and the golf television mecca known as Orlando not very far away. With Myrtle Beach hosting the 4,000-plus World Amateur Championship maybe they have it for amateur golfers and Ponte Vedra Beach claims the title for living and dead professional golfers? We’ll give it to St. Andrews for an honorable job incubating the game back in the 15th century.

It is always a pleasure to interview Claude Pardue, he has so much energy and a zest for life and connecting with other people!

It is always a pleasure to interview Claude Pardue, he has so much energy and a zest for life and connecting with other people!

Back to Claude. Must I always digress? Claude’s hobby is business and the family insurance business didn’t float his boat or his golf ball in the witchy swamps of life. He observed that in the early 1980s, millions of golfers and their dollars were getting into the golf business. All he needed was ‘a property to match his business formula of being in the upper end and offering something unique to golfers.’ He found that in a swamp and did such a remarkable job that International Paper came to him and asked him to build a showcase 36-hole golfing facility so that they could develop their land around it. The rest is history they say. But the Pardue story doesn’t end there.

The innovator, who believes that every person and every company has a responsibility to give, did just that and starter a Myrtle Beach Foundation called ‘Pardue Children in Need Fund.’ This charity interacts directly with the disadvantaged youth with respect and a willingness to have them enjoy regular childhood experiences, like movies and picking out a favorite pair of new sneakers, that their current situation does not allow for. Supporting the charity with time and energy focused on the children is a Mystic Golf organization commitment so everyone is involved. Not only do the children benefit but the organization benefits in terms of enhanced teamwork and bonding, that arise from doing good service acts together. Once again Claude seems to have taken a couple of separate ideas and initiatives and brought them cohesively together under one umbrella, whether it is building golf courses or running a charitable organization.

ONE The Show is an amazing performance and always changing year-to-year!

ONE The Show is an amazing performance and always changing year-to-year!

Tony Award ® -winner and Broadway legend, Ben Vereen,will do a fundraising show to benefit the ‘Pardue Children in Need Fund’ at the Alabama Theatre in North Myrtle Beach on Friday evening January 25th, 2015 at 7:30 pm. Country music stars ALABAMA opened the theatre in 1993 as a way to return to their musical roots in Myrtle Beach where they started out playing for tips at The Bowery, a local nightclub. It’s a great theatre with a great ongoing show called ‘ONE the Show.’ Their website describes it as a combination of “extraordinary talent, iconic production numbers, sizzling visual elements and extravagant costuming with hit songs from many exciting musical genres,” and I agree for sure! So entertaining and so patriotic it was a wonderful way to spend an evening with friends celebrating my birthday!

A glorious sunrise greeted me on my birthday at the Sea Mist Oceanfront.

A glorious sunrise greeted me on my birthday at the Sea Mist Oceanfront.

The Sea Mist Oceanfront, established in 1954, is celebrating “sixty years of fun in the sun!” Long time General Manager Jim Leach is retiring. Things change and so has the Sea Mist over the years. As their website states: “the property has grown to a 15 acre oceanfront playground with the largest variety of lodging types and family friendly amenities in the Myrtle Beach area.” Change, even transitions in life, always turn out for the better and the same is true for the Sea Mist. One thing that never changes is the oceanfront. This year I slept with the sliding door open so I could be serenaded by the surf all night long. What a beautiful view to awaken to!

Maybe I got this right? Claude Pardue is the Wizard and I am too by invoking the Eagles’ Witchy Woman to celebrate another birthday with the Sea Mist, Mystic Golf, and the Alabama Theatre. Here’s the tune I am singing these days: He held me spellbound on the Witch, Wizard & Man O’ War Swampy swamps, hilly hillocks and watery water Crazy laughter in another foursome but serious golf in our twosome We drove ourselves to victory avoiding the swamp, the hill and the water.

Another birthday golf vacation to Mystic Golf in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina… priceless for sure!

For more information about The Witch, Man-0-War and The Wizard, please visit www.mysticalgolf.com, or call 843.282.2977.

Pete Dye’s Teeth of the Dog in the Dominican Republic, A Must Play!

Well that is correct but not specific enough.

Pete Dye’s Teeth of the Dog at Casa de Campo in the Dominican Republic, A Must Play!

That’s specific but not completely true.

Pete Dye’s five golf courses at Casa de Campo, including Teeth of the Dog, All Must Be Played.

I was joyful being at Casa de Campo!

I was joyful being at Casa de Campo!

Casa de Campo is truly a golf resort with 90 Pete Dye-designed golf holes, seven of which are on the Caribbean Sea expertly contained within the Dog’s 18 Teeth. Did you know the average adult dog has 42 teeth? I wish Dye’s most beautiful golf course had as many holes as a dog has teeth to be honest with you. It is a round that no golfer, no matter how they are playing or scoring, ever wants to end.

To put it mildly, the golf at Casa de Campo is exceptional. This is vintage ‘Pete Dye,’ both in design and up close and personal. There are four golf course locations—‘Teeth of the Dog,’ ‘Dye Fore,’ ‘The Links,’ and the private La Romana CC. Dye Fore and La Romana have 27 holes to make the equivalent of five Pete Dye golf courses in one thrilling location.

The 176-yard par-3 fifth hole is the first ocean front hole on the Teeth of the Dog. Photo Credit: Casa de Campo

The 176-yard par-3 fifth hole is the first ocean front hole on the Teeth of the Dog. Photo Credit: Casa de Campo

I see the recently completed Pete Dye Course at French Lick as his final masterpiece. Teeth of the Dog at Casa de Campo was his first masterpiece. Dye came to the Dominican Republic in the late ‘60s and helped Gulf and Western find this perfect location close to the sea, same as the great Scottish courses the young Dye had toured just a few years before. When finished with the first course in 1971, Dye named it the name he had heard the workers use referring to the sharp coral rock underfoot as “diente del perro,” or “Teeth of the Dog.” While the coral rock is neutralized by the wearing of golf shoes, the wind and design, certainly made me fearful as though I was looking at the teeth of an angry dog. But he didn’t bite me or attack. Rather the beauty of the sea and the beauty of the design made me grateful to be alive and having this golfing experience.

Casa de Campo is the Caribbean’s leading resort and Teeth of the Dog is the Number One golf course in Latin America. It is that simple. You have to come and experience this original and vintage Pete Dye designed golf course!

CLICK here for a BEAUTY VIDEO of Casa de Campo’s Teeth of the Dog.

The 229-yard par-3 seventh hole is all the golf you ever need in one hole. Photo Credit: Casa de Campo

The 229-yard par-3 seventh hole is all the golf you ever need in one hole. Photo Credit: Casa de Campo

The golf course starts off gently and then swings you around to play Nos. 5,6,7 & 8 with the ocean on your left. Then it quickly brings you back to the clubhouse for the turn and maybe a bite to eat to just have a few moments to reflect on the recent experience. The first five holes on the second nine are solid. The last, No. 14 being a reachable par-5 with a lake guarding the front right of the green. You don’t have to force a carry but if you do like I did from the right side of the fairway, then it is a 2-putt birdie. Then as if taken though a tunnel of bamboo trees, the cart path quickly whisks you back out to the sea. Almost like a dosey-doe there you are confronted with another three ocean front holes, this time with the ocean on the right. Good thing you figured out how to correct that slice on the inland holes. The 484-yard par-4 18th, a strong finishing hole, takes you back to the safety of the clubhouse to ponder one of the best, if not the best round of golf in your lifetime.

In adult dogs, approximate age can be determined by checking the wear on their incisors. In adult golfers, our love of the game and commitment to seek its full understanding and relationship to life itself, can be deepened and strengthened by a golf trip to Casa de Campo.

There is no bite, or even a bark, just the roar of the wind and the sea waiting for you at Teeth of the Dog!

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Gilles Gagnon, Director of Golf Operations.

CLICK here for Andy’s feature article on Casa de Campo.

Photo Opp, Teeth of the Dog, playing this golf course is on most golfers' bucket list.

Photo Opp, Teeth of the Dog, playing this golf course is on most golfers’ bucket list.

With Pete Dye's statue outside the Teeth of the Dog clubhouse.

With Pete Dye’s statue outside the Teeth of the Dog clubhouse.

With Giles Gagnon, 'Mr. Casa de Campo Himself.'

With Giles Gagnon, ‘Mr. Casa de Campo Himself.’

Looking back at the 374-yard par-4 15th hole. The wind is always blowing except when they take the media pictures!

Looking back at the 374-yard par-4 15th hole. The wind is always blowing except when they take the media pictures!

Looking back at the 204-yard par-3 16th hole.

Looking back at the 204-yard par-3 16th hole.

The green at the 463-yard par-4 17th green, the last of seven ocean front holes on Teeth of the Dog.

The green at the 463-yard par-4 17th green, the last of seven ocean front holes on Teeth of the Dog.

 

LIVE & DIRECT FROM NEW YORK: Casa de Campo!

 

It is easy to get to Casa de Campo. Once there you will jump for joy like I did!

It is easy to get to Casa de Campo. Once there you will jump for joy like I did!

Jet Blue, American Airlines, United, Delta, Spirit, Frontier, US Airways and others all fly straight from the United States to three international airports in the Dominican Republic, all within a convenient shuttle ride to Casa de Campo. In fact there are 15 or so flights directly from the New York/New Jersey Metropolitan Area. Golfers and tourists from other parts of the world are flying direct to the Dominican Republic from places like Cuba, Canada, Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina, Brazil, Europe and the Caribbean. Maybe the opening line on Saturday Night Live needs to be rewritten—LIVE & DIRECT FROM WHEREVER YOU ARE: Casa de Campo in the Domincan Republic is not too far and not too hard to get to. For me it was an easy ‘island hop’ over from San Juan, Puerto Rico after covering the Puerto Rico Open.

The long 229-yard par 3 7th hole of Teeth of the Dog, one of seven ocean front holes.

The long 229-yard par 3 7th hole of Teeth of the Dog, one of seven ocean front holes. PHOTO CREDIT: Casa de Campo

I, of course, came for the golf, more specifically the Pete Dye designed golf. Surely you have heard of the ‘Teeth of the Dog’? Or ‘Dye Fore’? My trip is Casa de Campo was an extension of the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf,’ the 100-day, 14-country, 18,471-mile odyssey that sort of became the Americas’ Pete Dye Golf Trail. Starting with meeting son Perry Dye in San Salvador, El Salvador and playing El Encanto before it even opened, adding La Reunion in Guatemala, Black Pearl in Honduras, and Buzios Golf Club in Brazil, the trip to the Olympic Course in Rio de Janeiro was transformed into a Dye-Designed Journey! Based on my experience at Casa de Campo I will be seeking, finding and hopefully playing all Dye-designed golf courses between St. Louis, where Olympic Golf was last played at Glen Echo CC in 1904, and Rio before the golf-rich Summer Olympics begin on August 5th, 2016.

CLICK here for a tour of the Sporting Life at Casa de Campo with Giselle Gonzalvo.

Aerial view of Altos de Chavon with Amphitheater in the foreground and Dye Fore golf course above the river. PHOTO CREDIT: Casa de Campo

Aerial view of Altos de Chavon with Amphitheater in the foreground and Dye Fore golf course above the river. PHOTO CREDIT: Casa de Campo

As I confessed above, I came for the golf but what I found was an enchanting and complete community that I did not want to leave. I could spend ‘the rest of my life’ at Casa de Campo discovering the sporting life, wining and dining and being entertained in Altos de Chavon, a 16th century replica of a Mediterranean village perched high above the Chavón River, and of course golfing on a total of 90 superior Pete Dye-designed golf holes displayed beautifully at four courses— ‘Teeth of the Dog,’ ‘Dye Fore,’ ‘The Links,’ and the private La Romana CC. Dye Fore and La Romana have 27 holes to make the equivalent of five Pete Dye golf courses in one thrilling location. Another confession—the video below is better than the one I did above. Confession is good for the soul, so is a vacation at Casa de Campo!

CLICK here for Casa de Campo’s “Discover the Sporting Life” VIDEO.

Pete Dye showing me the long view and his unmatched and insightful golf course architecture perspectives at the golf course that bears his name in French Lick, Indiana.

Pete Dye showing me the long view and his unmatched and insightful golf course architecture perspectives at the golf course that bears his name in French Lick, Indiana.

To put it mildly, the golf at Casa de Campo is exceptional. This is vintage ‘Pete Dye,’ both in design and up close and personal. I see the Pete Dye Course at French Lick as his final masterpiece and Teeth of the Dog at Casa de Campo as his first one. Dye came to the Dominican Republic in the late ‘60s and helped Gulf and Western find this perfect location close to the sea, same as the great Scottish courses the young Dye had toured just a few years before. When finished with the first course in 1971, Dye named it the name he had heard the workers use referring to the sharp coral rock underfoot as “diente del perro,” or “Teeth of the Dog.” While the coral rock is neutralized by the wearing of golf shoes, the wind and design, certainly made me fearful as though I was looking at the teeth of an angry dog. Casa de Campo is the Caribbean’s leading resort and Teeth of the Dog is the Number One golf course in Latin America. It is that simple. You have to come and experience this original and vintage Pete Dye designed golf course!

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Gilles Gagnon, Director of Golf Operations.

With Giles Gagnon, 'Mr. Casa de Campo Himself.'

With Giles Gagnon, ‘Mr. Casa de Campo Himself.’

Another name that is synonymous with golf at Casa de Campo is Gilles Gagnon, who has been at the resort for more than 30 years. If you have visited and played golf then you know Gilles, it’s that simple. A professional hockey player turned golf professional via an opportunity to coach golf as well as hockey at Colgate University in upstate New York, Pete Dye personally brought Gilles to Casa de Campo to take care of the golf courses. When he first arrived in 1981 there were two golf courses and few homes. Now there are five golf courses and over 1600 homes. He is an event creator and there are four golfers that have not missed a Casa de Campo Open in 33 years! Like his career, his schedule of events is long, year-round.   One of the most popular tournaments is the Casa de Campo Open, which he began his second year at the resort: A number of golfers have attended every single one. His favorite course is Teeth of the Dog and in a way, Gagnon and “The Dog” have grown up together. Working tirelessly to promote the resort, when asked about retirement his stock answer is, “Where do people want to go when they retire? The Caribbean. Heck…I’m already here!”

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Peter Bonell, Chief Marketing Officer.

With Peter Bonell, a seasoned veteran in the golf resort and real estate business.

With Peter Bonell, a seasoned veteran in the golf resort and real estate business.

When the marketing guy is the marketing message you know the vacation experience will be real and as advertised. One can’t meet a nicer man than Peter Bonell and there is no one else that exemplifies ‘the sporting life’ at Casa de Campo as he does. Fit to a ‘Tee,’ an avid tennis player and golfer, he is also a sharp business man delivering a superior resort experience at a competitive price. I know this because he missed a ‘tee’ time to play golf with me on Saturday at Dye Fore. But I bet he did play tennis with his wife in the evening after taking care of business. A New Yorker, who started as a valet parking cars and then found the golf resort real estate business at places like The Broadmoor and Pinehurst, Pete is a seasoned change agent that is taking Casa de Campo to even greater heights. A lot higher than I jumped in my joyful Casa de Campo picture!

Casa de Campo is a magical place, with its golf and multitude of other sports and Altos de Chavon. Built by Paramount Pictures in the late 70s as a set for movies and to entertain clients, there is no other place of earth quite like it, not even the sixteenth-century Mediterranean village which inspired its construction. It is a world class and in a class all by itself and most fortunately one is able to get there on a relatively short direct flight from all over the Western Hemisphere.

My recommendation is to ‘discover the sporting life’ at Casa de Campo with friends and family as soon as you can!

Live & Direct from New York; it’s Casa de Campo!

Photo Opp, Teeth of the Dog, playing this golf course is on most golfers' bucket list.

Photo Opp, Teeth of the Dog, playing this golf course is on most golfers’ bucket list.

With Pete Dye's statue outside the Teeth of the Dog clubhouse.

With Pete Dye’s statue outside the Teeth of the Dog clubhouse.

Fifth green on TOD, only golf course with seven holes on the Caribbean, said to be made by God, not Pete Dye.

Fifth green on TOD, only golf course with seven holes on the Caribbean, said to be made by God, not Pete Dye.

The rooms at Casa De Campo are spacious and comfortable, very comfortable!

The rooms at Casa De Campo are spacious and comfortable, very comfortable!

The food at Casa de Campo is exceptional, especially the seafood!

The food at Casa de Campo is exceptional, especially the seafood!

The views of Altos de Chavon and the river gorge on Dye Fore are to die for!

The views of Altos de Chavon and the river gorge on Dye Fore are to die for!

I was joyful being at Casa de Campo!

I was joyful being at Casa de Campo!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wake Up & Play Rip Van Winkle CC in Palenville, NY

Rip's hair is longer in the front than mine but other than that we have similar lifestyles though he journeyed in his sleep and I journey on golf courses!

Rip’s hair is longer in the front than mine but other than that we have similar lifestyles though he journeyed in his sleep and I journey on golf courses!

About mid way through the East Coast Golf Journey I got wind of the Rip Van Winkle Golf Trail and had to venture over to Palenville, NY in the Great Northern Catskills to play the namesake golf course—the Rip Van Winkle CC. ‘The Rip,’ as the local golfers call it, is owned and operated by Sara & John Smith. John is a third generation owner as his grandparents purchased the golf course in 1949. An ‘above par’ guy, apparently Sara moved him into a new pro shop and together they renovated the clubhouse as a restaurant & tavern with other space to host banquets, weddings and other events. ‘The Rip’ has quickly and successfully transformed from a one-season golf course business to a four-season family hospitality business.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with GM John Smith.

With my golfing buddy, the Back Nine Bud Dog!

With my golfing buddy, the Back Nine Bud Dog!

Playing ‘The Rip’ is an extraordinary golfing experience. First you have the spectacular Catskill Mountains to gaze up to while walking a very beautiful golf course nestled on the floor of the valley. Second, it is an authentic 1919 Donald Ross design and lastly it is in great shape with a recently upgraded irrigation system. Rumor has it that the golfer Rip Van Winkle fell asleep in the woods to the left of the 4th hole and awakened on the long 15th hole. Sounds like my typical round of golf! ‘The Rip’ is a nine hole golf course with two sets of tees. If you want to play more you hook up with the Back Nine Bud Dog. I found like many locals do that “nine is fine,” as the East Coast Journey continued down to my sister Joanne’s place on Long Island with a side trip out of JFK to the inaugural Caribbean Golf Merchandise Show in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

CLICK here for a GOLFING VIDEO of Andy playing Signature Hole No. 3 at ‘the Rip.’

My only advice to Rip is to wake up, play your namesake golf course and enjoy ‘the rest of your life.’

With John Smith, GM & owner of the Rip Van Winkle Country Club, Banquet Facility & Restaurant.

With John Smith, GM & owner of the Rip Van Winkle Country Club, Banquet Facility & Restaurant.

Like Rip and typical for my golf game, I fell asleep in the middle of the round.

Like Rip and typical for my golf game, I fell asleep in the middle of the round.

The 5th is my favorite! A tee shot over water to the fairway short of a creek to be carried to the green. Sloped green a la Donald Ross!

The 5th is my favorite! A tee shot over water to the fairway short of a creek to be carried to the green. Sloped green a la Donald Ross!

I had the tasty Italian Deli Panini in the Tavern after golf. Nice 19th hole with a view of the first tee, golf course and Catskill Mountains.

I had the tasty Italian Deli Panini in the Tavern after golf. Nice 19th hole with a view of the first tee, golf course and Catskill Mountains.

A close-up of Rip Van Winkle with his golf clubs. I look forward to returning next year and exploring his trail so more in between naps.

A close-up of Rip Van Winkle with his golf clubs. I look forward to returning next year and exploring his trail some more in between naps.

A nice place to stop for a break, golf and lunch if you are traveling by on Interstate 87 (Exit 21, 25 miles south of Albany).

A nice place to stop for a break, golf and lunch if you are traveling by on Interstate 87 (Exit 21, 25 miles south of Albany).