Day 11: Stay at Riverside Oaks Golf Resort & Play Bungool Course

The 18th green of the Gargurra Course with the modern Riverside Oaks Clubhouse in the background.

The 18th green of the Gargurra Course with the modern Riverside Oaks Clubhouse in the background.

The Riverside Oaks Golf Resort was the first resort I stayed at in Australia and I could not have picked a better one! The golf was outstanding with the Bob Harrison designed Bungool Course opened just a week earlier and the refurbished Gargurra Course hosting the New South Wales PGA Championship, an event on the Australasia Tour, in a few weeks. The accommodations, only a year old, are first-class, very comfortable and so close to the golf you can drop a golf ball and it will roll down the hill to the first tee of the Gargurra Course. Proclaimed as Sydney’s only 36 hole championship golf resort, this is the one for Australians to revisit again and for International golf travelers to visit for sure if anywhere near Sydney.

With General Manager Kenneth Chan who's passion is running a golf resort and running it well.

With General Manager Kenneth Chan who’s passion is running a golf resort and running it well.

The ‘staying and playing’ experience at any resort is only as good as its owners and investors and their plans for the future. In late 2009 it was announced that China’s Nanshan Group was buying the Riverside Oaks property. They are one of China’s top 500 companies and also own Mission Hills, the world’s largest golf facility with twelve golf courses that has hosted World Cup competitions. Their plans to invest in accommodations and a second golf course have all come to fruition. Riverside Oaks is their Australian flagship property and is the training base for the Chinese National Squad (whose Olympic Team is being coached by Australian Greg Norman). Kenneth Chan is the General Manager. After meeting and conversing with Ken there is no doubt in my mind that even bigger and better days are ahead for the Riverside Oaks Golf Resort. The three days and two nights I spent there were big and better already and I now know that golf resorts in Australia are on par or better than their famous golf courses and other resorts around the world!

CLICK here for VIDEO INTERVIEW with David Scott, Deputy Manager of the Riverside Oaks Golf Resort.

With Golf Course Superintendent Glenn Gibson-Smith (L) and Deputy Manager David Scott (R). Two A-Plus golfers on the team at Riverside Oaks Golf Resort.

With Golf Course Superintendent Glenn Gibson-Smith (L) and Deputy Manager David Scott (R). Two A-Plus golfers on the team at Riverside Oaks Golf Resort.

More specifically, the ‘staying and playing’ experience at any resort is only as good as its day-to-day management team and support staff. David Scott is no Deputy Barney Fife! Here’s a young buck, former professional golfer with a passion and all the energy in the world to make your stay at Riverside Oaks memorable, engaging and fun or whatever you want it to be. I loved the part  of the interview where he says his wife gave him a nudge. Yes, this is a remote resort (it’s 60 km from the heart of the Sydney CBD), an hour from Sydney in the middle of nowhere but that is the point. Their is a peacefulness aside a lazy, though powerful, and magnificent Hawkesbury River. A quietness where you can hear yourself exhale and say “this is good’ and hear the putt drop and clink into the cup. It is all about the golf and a relaxing resort experience with friends and family!

The 4th green on Bungool, the sweet and beautiful spot in the opening salutation.

The 4th green on Bungool, the sweet and beautiful spot in the opening salutation.

Being one of the first to play the new Bungool course was exciting and invigorating. The course is in great condition for being one week old, sort of like that newborn baby getting quickly cleaned up and placed on a mother’s bosom. This baby is perfect and will grow into being a perfect adult golf course someday soon. I sort of laughed as I arrived to find a member sharing his challenging experience of playing Bungool for the first time—difficult lies, deep rough in places (baby needs first hair cut but don’t you dare cut that beautiful hair), and new putting lines that need more expertise than perhaps even some of the pros that will be playing her sister course in the NSW PGA have the ability to read. I felt like I was at home at The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. No one said life or golf was suppose to be easy all the time!

I love how Harrison takes you out and around over the first three holes and then back within that outline for holes 4 and 5 before taking you to the far end of the layout on the tenth green before bringing you back home. Sort of a links design with a twist to bring you to your senses in a secure, safe enclave early on in your round.

My first gallery of kangaroos early on the Bungool Course!

My first gallery of kangaroos early on the Bungool Course!

The kangaroos, my God, the kangaroos! So many, yet quite well behaved and as mindful of any gallery of patrons I have see at the Masters. Though it took me a few holes to get comfortable playing in front of a gallery and not being fearful of an errant shot hitting poor little Joey or his sibling or mom or dad. No worries, it is a beautiful experience playing alongside the Hawkesbury River and in front of countless interested marsupials!

I scored high on the Bungool but went low (for me) on the Gargurra Course sinking a 30-footer for birdie at the last and posting a 78. No worries, no thoughts of sticking around for Stage 1 of Q-School that begins at Riverside Oaks on December 17th. Though I do think that would be the ultimate story—to be fitted with the best technology, coached by the best instructors and see what the best can be for my golf game.

CLICK here for A VIDEO INTERVIEW with Golf Course Superintendent Glenn Gibson-Smith.

The signature 141-yard par-3 11th hole on the Gargurra Course.

The signature 141-yard par-3 11th hole on the Gargurra Course.

It is always exciting to play on a golf course that professional golfers play and compete on for important titles, especially immediately before and after those competitions. Glenn came out to say hello to me on the second green. Here’s another person at Riverside Oaks with game. I liked his comment of “being stuck in the game ever since (my dad put a club in my hands at age 9). I wish I could one day say what he said, “playing off scratch at the moment.” Here’s a superintendent that knows what needs to be done course wise even before the golfers do. Only a recent addition to the Riverside Oaks team, with a plan in place for both the new (Bungool) and the old (Gargurra) there is no doubt in my mind that theses two golf courses will become the best conditioned in the Sydney area within a year or too. From my amateurish perspective I think they are pretty much there already. Kangaroos and a 78 I tell you!

With Chris Fox, learning the PLANEPUTT system of putting. My eyes haven't seen the reality of my putting stroke until this day!

With Chris Fox, learning the PLANEPUTT system of putting. My eyes haven’t seen the reality of my putting stroke until this day!

As I mentioned above I welcome golf instruction at any time but did not realize on the way out to Riverside Oaks I would find some there. I met Chris Fox, a PGA Professional, upon arrival to Riverside Oaks. In fact, it was he that was so gracefully and sympathetically listening to a member’s woes after playing Bungool. He is a putting coach and has developed the PLANEPUTT system and trainer. He has worked with Sydneysider Matt Jones who won the the 2014 Shell Houston Open with a chip in to defeat Matt Kuchar in a playoff. I guess if you have confidence in your putting you can be aggressive with your chipping.

Chris Fox with his son Ty. My gosh, this kid can play! From our tees too!

Chris Fox with his son Ty. My gosh, this kid can play! From our tees too!

Chris came back in the next day, his day off, to explain the PLANEPUTT system to me and to play the latest new nine on Bungool. In reality, putting is all about angles, planes and the inherent deception our eyes see and our brains translate for us. Chris’s system is a way to separate the facts from the myths while actually putting and getting a feel for the correct putting stroke. Not only did he give me some great putting advice (maybe I should stay for Q-School? NOT!) but gave me a tip on my grip that will change my golf game for the rest of my life. In a nice way, sincerely and honestly he told me not one professional golfer has a grip like mine with an exposed left thumb. He showed me the proper position for my hands to be in. It felt funny at first and still does occasionally but the results are there. A simple and correct grip leads to a simpler swing which leads to solid contact and straight ball flight. Hey maybe 78 is not my best score. THANK YOU Chris Fox, a consummate golf professional, who loves golf, people and sharing his knowledge and exuberance of the game! You can tell that by playing golf with his 7-year old son Ty, what a joy!

Reminiscing a bit, back to Day 11, staying at my first golf resort in Australia. Riverside Oaks Golf Resort is impressive with the new Bungool Course and the Gargurra Course, which is hosting the NSW PGA Championship this week.   (Facebook Link, Andy Reistetter, 12/1/14)

Here are a few more pictures that tell the story of my memorable ‘stay and play’ time at Riverside Oaks Golf Resort:

 

Riverside Oaks is not only a great resort but is championship golf at its best!

Riverside Oaks is not only a great resort but is championship golf at its best!

A Riverside Oaks room is spacious, comfortable and inviting!

A Riverside Oaks room is spacious, comfortable and inviting!

View from my room. Definitely a plus to stay on course and be able to drive your golf cart to the room.

View from my room. Definitely a plus to stay on course and be able to drive your golf cart to the room.

There are water sports on the Hawkesbury River after the golf sports at Riverside Oaks.

There are water sports on the Hawkesbury River after the golf sports at Riverside Oaks.

Mommy with Baby Joey in the Pouch!

Mommy with Baby Joey in the Pouch!

Another of my friends. Wanted to offer him a club and ball to play along but I was afraid he would accept the invitation and beat me!

Another of my friends. Wanted to offer him a club and ball to play along but I was afraid he would accept the invitation and beat me!

 

 

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.

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!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunny Hill Resort, the Place to Vacation in the Great Northern Catskills

My arrival to Sunny Hill, a 'rural city with no neighbors.'

My arrival to Sunny Hill, a ‘rural city with no neighbors,’ was a bit cloudy but the rest of the visit was all sunshine!

Sunny Hill Resort & Golf Courses is only 123 miles from my childhood home at 2 Florence Street in Binghamton, New York. Why it took me five decades to find it I will never know but I am happy I did. Let me tell you why. My first sense of Sunny Hill was driving past the ‘Top of the Hill’ driving range and thinking that Einstein must have come up with the name since it was perfect. As I drove into Sunny Hill, even though it wasn’t completely sunny overhead I felt completely bright within. What is great about the ‘East Coast Golf Journey, is that I am discovering golf resorts close to home right in my own back yard. Granted, the whole East Coast is my backyard since I live in Florida and have land to build a summer home  on Mount Prospect, not far from where I grew up, in Binghamton . If you are from the Metropolitan New York-New Jersey area or Upstate New York and Pennsylvania here is the top-of-the-list option for a ‘Drivation,” a vacation near home that you can easily drive to. Actually Sunny Hill is centrally located for the entire Northeastern United States. Enough of the logistics, let me tell and show you why there is a magical vacation awaiting you at Sunny Hill.

With the present day Nicholsen owner & operating family—Wayne, Gail and Gary from left-to-right.

With the present day Nicholsen owner & operating family—Wayne, Gail and Gary from left-to-right.

This is not a five-star resort but it is a resort with five stars—Gary, Wayne, Gail, Aunt Flory and You! Why you? I was the newest member of the Nicholsen family. You are the next.  Gary, Wayne, and Gail are the children of Mae and Arnold Nicholsen who transformed a dairy farm to the foundation of today’s family and golf resort. Aunt Flory is Mae’s sister and a gem to meet at age 97. You will meet her later and hopefully in person soon as she is a vintage woman in all regards.

With the Theil family from New Hampshire in the spacious and modern Garwayne Dining Hall.

With the Theil family from New Hampshire in the spacious and modern Garwayne Dining Hall.

I arrived mid afternoon after the lunch hour. Gail was very accommodating and saved a lunch for me. That shrimp scampi was as tasty as all the other meals I enjoyed in the Garwayne Dining Hall, which is named after Gary and Wayne. I met father Erik and son Christian Gundersen who literally arrived hours before at JFK from their home in Norway. The 8 unit Arendal guest lodging is named after  the hometown in Norway of founder Peter Nicholsen who purchased the land in 1920. There is a strong Norwegian and Viking presence epitomized with the Viking Obstacle Course and an annual Race Weekend. I met Thor, Gail’s husband, and I think he is a viking—tall, big, strong a man as I have ever seen. I know what you are wondering—the boys got something named after them, what about Gail? Lake Loree, a 15-acre recreational paradise for the young and old kids alike, was created and named after Gail Loree Nicholsen, seven years before the new dining hall arrived at Sunny Hill.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Sunny Hill guest Joe DeAngelis.

First green on the Sunny Hill course with the Edmonton and tennis courts in the background.

First green on the Sunny Hill course with the Edmonton and tennis courts in the background.

I was having such a good time I almost forgot about the golf- not! Remember this is Andy’s Golf & Travel Diary, where one is traveling to the golf wherever it may be! After enjoying my special lunch and checking into my room at the Edmonton, I grabbed my clubs and walked 200 yards to the Sunny Hill golf course clubhouse. I could have just as easily pitched a ball to the first green as the front nine encompasses most of the resort buildings. The back nine was added in 1989 and with the acquisition of Thunderhart, a nearby 18-hole championship layout, in 2005 Sunny Hill became the only family operated resort in New York State with 36 holes of golf. The onsite course is a beginner type course with a par of 66 and the longest hole, the 425-yard par-5 13th. It is perfect for beginners and the occasional golfer like Joe DeAngelis in the video interview above who only plays golf when he is up from Long Island at Sunny Hill.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Kevin Smith, the Director of Golf at Sunny Hill.

With Kevin Smith, the Director of Golf at Sunny Hill, in a very special place, the 5th tee at Thunderhart.

With Kevin Smith, the Director of Golf at Sunny Hill, in a very special place, the 5th tee at Thunderhart.

Thunderhart will challenge any golfer’s game with a variety of holes and one very special hole—the highest, with the best view—the short par-4 5th hole. On that tee is a monument to Bill Gressick the PGA of America Golf Professional at Pleasant View Golf Course from the very first day of operation in the Fall of 1968 and for the next 15 years thereafter. Pleasant View, while quite appropriate, was Thunderhart’s original name, but not Viking enough for the Norwegians of Sunny Hill. The Nicholsen’s are improving the golf experience on Thunderhart’s second nine with the addition of several fairway bunkers. There is lodging at Thunderhart making it the ideal secluded get-away golf trip for good friends, men or women or both that want a more intimate golfing experience. Do you know who else was there on opening day to hit the first tee shot at Thunderhart? The one-and-only-one, the Squire, Gene Sarazen. Wow! One departing golf shot, Director of Golf Kevin Smith has created a NIKE hot spot at Thunderhart. See him for the best deals on NIKE apparel and equipment!

Gary Nicholsen, Mr. Patriot, with Cyvelle `Tinker` Nicholsen at the Lake Party Friday night.

Gary Nicholsen, Mr. Patriot, with Cyvelle `Tinker` Nicholsen at the Lake Party Friday night.

The first time I met Gary Nicholsen was when he was the Master of Ceremonies for my first evening meal in the Garwayne Dining Hall. With this being the last night for the week-long visitors, it was revival-like to celebrate the past week and get pumped up for the Friday Night event—the Lake Party—complete with music, hotdogs, beer, soda, ice cream, “Just for Fun” rides and Fireworks. “Just for Fun” rides? Yes, there’s the real-sized Monster Truck, Fire Truck, Paddy Wagon with the Munsters front end, the Bumble Bee Thing and so many military vehicles that they have to have a separate night for them. I can’t tell you how much fun I had down at the lake party. I had never had a ride in a firetruck before and my father was a city fireman for 25 years. I do remember Dad taking me to the station and letting me sit in the back of the hook-n-ladder—my Kramer experience (Seinfeld Episode 117, The Secret Code). The fireworks, choreographed to patriotic songs like America the Beautiful, God Bless America, Neil Diamond’s Coming to America and Bruce Springsteen’s Born in the USA were inspirational and spectacular to say the least. Gary Nicholsen, in my opinion, is Mr. Patriot and the Sunny Hill Resort is Hometown, USA!

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Wayne Nicholsen, Snowmobile Hall of Fame Member.

Snowmobile Hall of Fame member Wayne Nicholsen in front of a tribute area in Armae Hall at Sunny Hill.

Snowmobile Hall of Fame member Wayne Nicholsen in front of a tribute area in Armae Hall at Sunny Hill.

There is a twist here in that most people head south in the winter to find summer yet Wayne had a summer job in the north and stayed to enjoy sports like snowmobile racing. With an introduction from his older brother Gary, the public face of Sunny Hill, raced for enjoyment and the thrill it generated within him. Thirty years later, 25 years with sponsor Ski-Doo, Wayne Nicholsen was inducted into the Snowmobile Hall of Fame in St. Germain, Wisconsin in 2011. Humble, like his sister Gail and brother Gary, he readily accepts the sport’s highest honor with a great sense of gratitude, pride and amazement. With their children involved in the business and their spouses too and even grandchildren, the whole Nicholsen family has the same perspective when you share a story or a compliment about Sunny Hill. They, as much as their guests, know and appreciate what a special place it is, especially in today’s world of electronic gadgetry and living in the next moment. Life will always be about the spirit behind the curtain and living in the present moment, something you can surely do at Sunny Hill.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Aunt Flory at Sunny Hill Resort.

We are both well seated for an interview with dear, precious & beautiful Aunt Flory at Sunny Hill.

We are both well seated for an interview with dear, precious & beautiful Aunt Flory at Sunny Hill.

There were many highlights in my visit to Sunny Hill. The present day story of and my visit to Sunny Hill would not be complete without meeting 97-year old Aunt Flory. Mae’s sister is an incredible person. What a precious person is the lady who sat on my lap for the interview! Quite outspoken and to the point, you will have to meet her in person, if you haven’t already, to know what I mean! What an insightful interview she gave me though I had to edit the 15 minutes or so down to only two or three. Sunny Hill is a family place and what family doesn’t cherish their nonagenarian!

There is a bell outside the dining hall that is rung by the children at Sunny Hill every day as a signal that it is time for dinner. It reminded me of my Mom opening the door and yelling that it was time to come home for supper. The bell was taken from the one-room schoolh0ouse that Arnold Nicholsen attended as a child. It rings loud and clear. I think it is appropriate that the video interview above with Aunt Flory ends with children ringing the bell. Maybe that is the ultimate story of Sunny Hill? Aren’t we suppose to become childlike in our older years? The connection and sharing that takes place at Sunny Hill may be Story No. 1. What a wholesome, beautiful, human activity we all can benefit from doing more of.  I concur with the sentiments of guest Francis Pabst from Ramsey, New Jersey who wrote in a poem—”Take me back, if you will to that sweet Sunny Hill.” God Bless our great country, Aunt Flory, the entire Nicholsen Family and the Sunny Hill Resort in the Great Northern Catskills!

With Christian & Erik Gundersen & Gary Nicholsen (far R) at dinner the first night.

With Christian & Erik Gundersen & Gary Nicholsen (far R) at dinner the first night.

Enjoyed riding in the 'Just for Fun' Fire Truck, though unlike Kramer, I did not get to drive!

Enjoyed riding in the ‘Just for Fun’ Fire Truck, though unlike Kramer, I did not get to drive!

This looked like fun but I think I am too tall.

This looked like fun but I think I am too tall.

Kevin Smith, now nicknamed Swoosh, is the NIKE Man!

Kevin Smith, now nicknamed Swoosh, is the NIKE Man!

Boy I wanted to ring that bell too! Note the NIKE Thunderhart shirt!

Boy I wanted to ring that bell too! Note the NIKE Thunderhart shirt!

Sunny Hill, always gracious and welcoming. Come back soon or go for the first time! I will see you there!

Sunny Hill, always gracious and welcoming. Come back soon or go for the first time! I will see you there!

 

 

 

 

 

Cronin’s Golf Resort, Adirondack Golf at its Best!

With brothers James (L) and John (R) who are always in constant motion serving their customers that it was hard to get this picture with them!

With brothers James (L) and John (R) who are always in constant motion serving their customers that it was hard to get this picture with them!

When I look for a good golf resort I want a great golfing experience, a bit of golf history,  and a place to have fun. Cronin’s Golf Resort in the Adirondack Park, with its fourth generation of ownership and operation, is all that and more. You will come, you will stay, you will golf and you will make great memories with family and friends, even if it is your first visit like mine was. Like the Adirondack Park, a cabin at Cronin’s is a bit rustic but it is clean and comfortable and your choice of location- off the 18th green or on the bank of the mighty Hudson River is pretty sweet. You will not meet nicer people than, brothers James and John Cronin and their wives Jeanie and Val respectively. Well, I lied there. The rest of the gang from Mo (Maureen) the bartender, to vacationing couples Lois & Tom and Jeanne & Bob, to Rob, the guy I played golf with and allowed me to interview him, they were as nice as James and John. Visiting Cronin’s Golf Resort was a one-of-a-kind fun experience, one I hope to repeat next year, like all the regulars who come back year after year. If you want to experience the Adirondacks, stay and golf at a very reasonable price, this is the place to do it!

You meet the nicest people on the golf course and at Cronin’s that is true to ‘the nth degree.’ I met Rob Riedinger, a man who shows his talent by example in terms of woodworking and home design in the Lake George area. Playing golf with him was an exceptional experience.

CLICK here for VIDEO INTERVIEW with golfer Rob Riedinger at Cronin’s Golf Resort.

Meeting Rob Riedinger for the first time on the first tee. Rob is an exceptional person with a great golf attitude!

Meeting Rob Riedinger for the first time on the first tee. Rob is an exceptional person with a great golf attitude!

There is really no other promotion needed for Cronin’s or the Adirondacks other than this man’s simple, honest and thoroughly experienced testimony in the video interview linked to above. I was impressed with he and his wife’s decision 13 years ago to leave the rat race to raise his family in a wholesome, outdoor, and intimate manner. I identified with his love of the game of golf and the reason why he loves golf—”it’s purely mental, an internal struggle and you don’t have to fight with anybody other than yourself.” I learned a lot about the Adirondack Park—the bubble and 46 peaks. Most importantly I learned more about James and John and how they run and operate Cronin’s Golf Resort. If you lose a club there it will be returned even if it is next season. Like finishing every hole by listening for the sound of the golf ball falling into the cup, Cronin’s leaves no detail of customer delight to chance.

The golf course has many timeless features such as this deceptive bunker on the par-4 dog-leg-left 7th hole.

The golf course has many timeless features such as this deceptive bunker on the par-4 dog-leg-left 7th hole.

The face of the business today is brothers James and John Cronin but the golfing legacy of Cronin’s Golf Resort goes back to their grandfather Patrick Cronin, the keeper of the green (forerunner of today’s golf course superintendent) at Glens Falls CC, a 1912 Donald Ross design. Influenced and inspired by the Scot who served an apprenticeship with Old Tom Morris in St Andrews, Patrick designed the front nine of the Cronin Golf Resort course in 1930. His son Robert, James and John’s father, purchased the property in 1945 and added the second nine in 1965. Robert, an  accomplished golfer, would demonstrate the game to young James and John by shooting 31s on the first nine and reach the par-5 fourth hole in two shots. Something neither son, even with teeing up the second shot in the fairway, could duplicate, even to this day. After father Robert became ill and retired, the youngsters took over the operation in 1998 and have never looked back. By reinvesting the profits back into the golf course,they raised several green complexes to be insulated from the whims of the at times vigorous and destructible Hudson River.

CLICK here for VIDEO INTERVIEW with owner/operator James Cronin.

James and his wife Jeanine at the bar having fun with their guests, including me!

James, after getting a little sun working the golf course, and his wife Jeanine at the bar having fun with their guests, including me!

Father Robert studied turf management at the University of Massachusetts Amherst with noted golf course architect Geoffrey Cornish. Son James also studied at UMass Amherst which is about a 3-hour drive from Cronin’s. That would become the apparent division of golf responsibilities between the sons, although with a lot of overlap. James would take care of the condition of the golf course while John, who studied in the PGA of America program, would take care of the swings of the golfers and together, with family and employees, do everything else. I remember my first conversation on the phone with John who ended it with “come and we will treat you like a farm animal.” James is outgoing, hard working and hilarious though attentive to all the guests at Cronin’s. You can pursue whatever your style of fun is at Cronin’s as long as “your happiness does not come at the expense of anyone else.” You can party at Cronin’s or you can find a quiet place along the Hudson and meditate in your own way. I did laugh when the beer delivery truck driver asked a relevant question in his mind— “does anyone ever play golf here or do they just drink?” I guess we can do both together and separately at Cronin’s.

CLICK here for VIDEO INTERVIEW with owner/operator John Cronin.

John with his hickory clubs. I can't wait to return and talk more about them and golf history with John.

John with his hickory clubs. I can’t wait to return and talk more about them and golf history with John.

Brother John is the quieter version of brother James though with the same big heart, love of golf, Cronin’s and especially the guests. John is an accomplished golfer and turned pro at the age of 19. He worked his way up the PGA of America apprentice program for seven years in Florida before returning home to run the business with James when their father became ill. He studied under some great golf professionals on his way up in the golf business including Dr. Gary Wiren, noted amateur golfer, educator, author and swing aid specialist. John is a historian of the game and a collector like me. He brought out some hickory clubs with markings I had never seen before. What impressed me most about John can be seen in his video interview above. His respect and attention to the customer. Notice that in the video there was no hesitation on John’s part to leave the interview and address his customer needs at the counter. He will surely delight you too. Notice too, by his comment, that the golfer is paying for his round after playing it. You can trust you will be treated like family at Cronin’s Golf Resort.

I used the term ‘the nth degree’ and think it apples to Cronin’s Golf Resort in terms of an infinite experience with lots of golf, fun and interesting people. I feel like one of the ‘Cronin’s Chronies’ now. As such, I bestow upon James and John the title of  ‘First Rate & Honorary, ‘to the nth Degree’ Golf Resort in the Adirondacks.’ They are Adirondack Golf at its Best!

Between local golf leagues and resort guests there is always someone interesting to meet in the barroom.

Between local golf leagues and resort guests there is always someone interesting to meet in the barroom.

Mo (Maureen) the bartender makes a fun place even more fun!

Mo (Maureen) the bartender makes a fun place even more fun!

 

My cabin was right off the 18th green. Cronin's is located in the heart of the Adirondacks tourist area only an hour from downtown Albany.

My cabin was right off the 18th green. Cronin’s is located in the heart of the Adirondacks tourist area only an hour from downtown Albany.

Coach Matt, a Sen Foley look-a-like, with his junior golfers on the Cronin golf course.

Coach Matt, a Sen Foley look-a-like, with his junior golfers on the Cronin golf course.

Ladies feel welcomed and like playing golf at Cronin's Golf Resort.

Ladies feel welcomed and like playing golf at Cronin’s Golf Resort.

Lovely Lady Gardener Lucy is the reason the grounds are so beautiful at Cronin's.

Lovely Lady Gardener Lucy is the reason the grounds are so beautiful at Cronin’s.

Cronin's Golf Resort, you can't beat it anywhere in the Adirondacks for value, golf and fun!

Cronin’s Golf Resort, you can’t beat it anywhere in the Adirondacks for value, golf and fun!

Shaftesbury Glen- Myrtle Beach’s Top Golfing Experience!

Shaftesbury Glen is part of the The Glen Golf Group along with Heather Glen, Glen Dormoch and Possum Trot.

Shaftesbury Glen is part of the The Glen Golf Group along with Heather Glen, Glen Dormoch and Possum Trot.

Doesn’t the best golfing experience occur when you go to place that is comfortable, you are engaged by the golf courses and you meet the nicest people? I had that happen to me when I rolled into the Shaftesbury Glen Golf & Fish Club located in West Myrtle Beach, South Carolina on the tale end (I tell tales right?) of my inaugural 5-week, 8-state, 4,231-mile ‘East Coast Golf Journey.’ First of all, I stayed in a Shaftesbury Suite in the Castle Clubhouse right on the golf course. The experience reminded me of Muirfield Village when I stayed in the Jones Villa with the Memorial Garden right outside my door. Not a lot of golf courses offer this option and it is a real treat! I stayed in the Ben Hogan Suite at Shaftesbury Glen.What better way to start a golfing vacation then to be warmly welcomed, then drop your stuff off in your suite and walk a few steps to the first tee? Okay two birdies in the first four holes and a 38 on the first nine holes played is a good start too. I am sold on Shaftesbury Glen Golf & Fish Club and I have not even caught a fish yet!

The par-3 15th at Shaftesbury Glen. Well bunkered elevated bent grass greens make for an exceptional golfing experience. If you can't make putts here, you can't make them anywhere Mr. Sinatra.

The par-3 15th at Shaftesbury Glen. Well bunkered elevated bent grass greens make for an exceptional golfing experience. If you can’t make putts here, you can’t make them anywhere Mr. Sinatra.

I met Ryan McCarty, the Director of Operations, at Shaftesbury Golf & Fish Club in the pro shop and later interviewed him in front of the Scottish Castle that is a clubhouse downstairs and five Shaftesbury Suites upstairs. The suites are large! He spoke of owner Paul Himmelsbach and how he caddied as a young lad at Winged Foot Golf Club and brought that type of golf course design to South Carolina. The ownership group of brothers Paul and Jack along with Marvin Arnsdorff started with Heather Glen and Glen Dornoch. Later they converted Himmelsbach family farmland into the Shaftesbury Masterpiece of generous and manicured fairways leading to well-bunkered elevated bent grass greens. Ryan grew up playing golf in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and moved to Myrtle Beach to be in the golf business year round. Though second in the title, the fishing in the Waccamaw River, behind the castle clubhouse is reported to be as good as the golf by golfers and fisherman alike.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Ryan McCarty, Director of Operations.

The fairway of the dog-leg-left par-4 2nd hole on the Red Nine. When I think of Heather Glen I think of Tranquility.

The fairway of the dog-leg-left par-4 2nd hole on the Red Nine. When I think of Heather Glen I think of Tranquility.

After the early morning interview with Ryan (can you tell I was a bit mellow in the interview?), I headed east to play Heather Glen and Glen Dornoch. To play Heather Glen, named the Best New Public Golf Course in 1987 is an extraordinary experience. The golf is tranquil, surreal and challenging but it is the Scottish charm in the atmosphere that will bring me back there. There’s a sense of connection not only with the game of golf and its history but with people. People like Sam Patrick, a beloved friend of owner Paul Himmelsbach. Paul remembers  Sam and shares his spirit with those of us who never met him with a picture and tribute in the pro shop. Sam, a Scot would great golfers in a full dress kilt and give them a hearty welcome with his Scottish accent. A trip to Scotland with Sam and a visit to Royal Dornoch is what inspired Paul’s second course Glen Dornoch. Sam was part of Heather Glen for over 20 years since it first opened to nearly his passing in 2010. The picture remains and so does his spirit at Heather Glen and across Highway 17 at Glen Dornoch.

The green at the par-3 8th on the Red Nine. Hard to pick a favorite hole at Heather Glen but if I had to this is it because I had a deuce here!

The green at the par-3 8th on the Red Nine. Hard to pick a favorite hole at Heather Glen but if I had to this is it because I had a deuce here!

I like the plaque on the par-3 4th hole on the White Nine and the memorabilia in the clubhouse for Jim Whelehan’s phenomenal feat. From Rochester, New York he came down on a golfing holiday with the Glens Group and beat all recorded odds by scoring two aces, same hole, same club, same ball, same day on March 1st, 1992. Assuming there were 17 other holes in between the same ball is what is remarkable to me. I played 36 holes in one glorious day (Heather Glen & Glen Dornoch), 8 par-3s and nary an ace. Though I did deuce the long White 8th and par the impossible 17th while being mesmerized by the vast lowlands and the waterway at Glen Dornoch. You know you are good when they have to time stamp your aces on the Hole-In-One plaque in the clubhouse. My consolation prize that day was time stamping my two scorecards. No plaque needed Paul, though tradition has spoken and said “I did the Glens!”

CLICK here for a BEAUTY VIDEO of Glen Dornoch Waterway Golf Links & Wildlife too!

Cruise ship coming by the 18th green at Glen Dornoch.

Cruise ship coming by the 18th green at Glen Dornoch.

Glen Dornoch is right on the Waterway which is the Intercoastal Waterway, a.k.a “The Ditch” where I call home in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. Beauty wise, it certainly is no ditch, rather it is an enticing blue passage that links the Atlantic Ocean to the Waccamaw River. Never more beautiful than the stretch near Glen Dornoch. The golf course immediately adjacent to the Waterway include the 8th green, 9th hole, 16th green and the 17th and 18th holes. As exceptional as those views are, my favorites are from above on the tee on the downhill straight-away par- 5 8th hole and from the elevated fairway of the par-4 16th green. Wildlife is abundant here with deer, squirrels and even a woodpecker (see above video) saying hello to me and making my visit to their home special. You will likely see a cruise ship pass by within pitching distance. Big boats passing by is a bit unusual but the nautical feel definitely enhances the golfing pleasure. The 9th & 18th double green complex sits right out in front of the clubhouse with the Waterway as a backdrop. Don’t miss spending some time rocking in the rocking chairs on the veranda and taking in the million-dollar view.

Outside the Shaftesbury Castle Clubhouse with my friend Mitch Laurance.

Outside the Shaftesbury Castle Clubhouse with my friend Mitch Laurance.

After some Golf Channel and a restful night of sleep in the suite, I felt inspired to put on my knickers and grad my hickory play set and look for a match. Was it mere coincidence that I met my old (as in long time) Mitch Laurance in the pro shop at Shaftesbury Glen Golf & Fish Club? Or by simple Scottish fate that the golf gods would bring together two lads wearing knickers and brandishing hickory-shafted drivers? No Academy Awards to be given here though the clubs certainly look vintage and deserving like those in The Greatest Game Ever Played. We met and headed to the first tee to put a peg in the ground.

CLICK here for a VIDEO of Hickory Golf played by Mitch & Andy.

Mitch's gem of a driver, a Jack Whie Sunningdale Special which he drove almost as well as Bobby Jones himself!

Mitch’s gem of a driver, a Jack Whie Sunningdale Special which he drove almost as well as Bobby Jones himself!

Before sailing that feathery down the first fairway courtesy of the Sunningdale Special Express, the voice of hickory golf himself, spoke of his connection to golf history through playing hickory golf. Who can dispute him who yields an authentic 100-year old club created by Jack White same as the driver used by Bobby Jones during his Grand Slam year of 1930.

Sporting my blue and gold checkered knickers I followed the master with a smash of my own. Right down the pretty goes our first tee shots. Hickory golf at its best, two grown men in knickers playing a twosome at Shaftesbury Glen Golf & Fish Club, a.k.a. Hickory Golf Central of the Southeast United States.

I managed to corral the popular golf radio host under a tree for an interrogation of his life, my life and more importantly more insight into Myrtle Beach’s top golfing destinations known simple as the Glens Group—Heather Glen, Glen Dornoch, Shaftesbury Glen Golf & Fish Club and the Glen-less in name only Possum Trot Golf Course.

CLICK here for a VIDEO Interview with Mitch Laurance, Biography & Shaftesbury Style!

With Mitch Laurance (other knicker guy) and Hugh Royer III in front of the new South Carolina Golf Center.

With Mitch Laurance (other knicker guy) and Hugh Royer III in front of the new South Carolina Golf Center.

If you have ever listened to or certainly if you have ever met Mitch Laurance you know him as an interesting guy with a cadre of looks, voice inflections and stories to quickly communicate his love of life and golf, especially hickory golf. His Curriculum Vitae includes Woodstock, working on production of Saturday Night Live the first five years of the show, including filling in on stage when needed, then moving to LA to become an actor, which is what brought him to golf.

With a twin brother and a younger brother growing up on Long Island he played all sports, especially baseball but never golf. An actor friend relentlessly encouraged him to try golf and he finally gave in. His friend said he would pick him up at six-thirty the next day to go golfing and Mitch’s response was to question the time since it would be getting dark at that time. He was immediately hooked by his inability to get the ball up into the air. He learned how to and after playing in the Crosby Pro-Am for 16 years and being a regular on the celebrity golf circuit he brought his game back east. Once an actor, always an actor, even though he was up and early for hickory golf at Shaftesbury Glen.

Instructor Hugh Royer, III working with junior golfer Haley Cleary.

Instructor Hugh Royer, III working with junior golfer Haley Cleary.

Before I left Shaftesbury Glen I met Hugh Royer III, a former PGA TOUR player and renowned instructor. Even though the state-of-the-art teaching facility of the South Carolina Golf Center was still under construction, I was hoping to edge my way in for a “Learn to Golf the Write Way” lesson where I receive needed professional help in return for a featured story about the experience. Understandably that did not happen as father Scott Cleary and his golfing daughter Haley had awaken at 3:45 am over in Lexington, South Carolina and driven 125 miles for a morning of instruction with Coach Hugh. The interaction of student, instructor and father was magical. I could understand why they had come so far as Haley was having fun as juniors in high school do and what I overheard instruction wise seemed brilliant to me. I still don’t understand why I didn’t get priority though, my swing needs a lot of help, her swing looks flawless.

Hugh Royer Jr. was inducted into the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame in 1989. Photo Credit: Georgia Golf Hall of Fame.

Hugh Royer Jr. was inducted into the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame in 1989. Photo Credit: Georgia Golf Hall of Fame.

Hugh’s father, Hugh Royer Jr. played on the PGA TOUR for 14 years, coached golf at Columbus State and was the block from which Hugh was a chip. The elder Royer, a member of the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame,  won the prestigious Western Open in 1970 while the younger Royer won the Western Amateur in 1987. Both tournaments were first organized by the Western Golf Association starting in 1899. In all that time only Junior and the Third have been a champion father and son combination. Hugh was giving his lesson to Haley in between phone calls with family about his father’s condition. Son left right after his lesson commitment to be with his father who passed on a few days later after a short illness. Life is like golf, sometimes there is a good swing, a good shot played and then a bad bounce at the end. My heartfelt sympathy goes out to Hugh and the Royer family.

Long ago, sports psychologist and noted author, Chuck Hogan gave Mitch a life tip that has stuck with him ever since—‘How you do one thing is how you do everything.”

With that I will close by noting that the folks at Shaftesbury Glen Golf & Fish Club present an immense golfing experience. Staying in their Shaftesbury Suites in a Scottish Castle within a pitch of the first tee box of an impeccable golf course with bent grass greens is unmatched in the Myrtle Beach area. They did that one thing right. Add Heather Glen and Glen Dornoch Waterway Golf Links and you can image the rest!

Played Heather Glen, Best New Public GOlf Course in 1987, with my new friend Brian Gallen.

Played Heather Glen, Best New Public GOlf Course in 1987, with my new friend Brian Gallen.

Dual hole-in-ones, dual membership in Hole-in One Club by Jim Whelehan!

Dual hole-in-ones, dual membership in Hole-in One Club by Jim Whelehan!

Dinner with my friend Sir Charles at Crab Catchers made for a special ending for a special 'I did the Glens' day! The food and atmosphere was even better!

Dinner with my friend Sir Charles at Crab Catchers made for a special ending for a special ‘I did the Glens’ day! The food and atmosphere was even better!

Nature prevails at Glen Dornoch...

Nature prevails at Glen Dornoch…

When I saw this woodpecker do his thing I could only laugh at myself. With a clear mind my next shot was pure, right down the middle, long and true! Why do we beat our heads against the wall. Just let it happen!

When I saw this woodpecker do his thing I could only laugh at myself. With a clear mind my next shot was pure, right down the middle, long and true! Why do we beat our heads against the wall. Just let it happen!

Golf is like life and it is all natural beauty at Dornoch Glen. Nature is saying to me- come back and see me again!

Golf is like life and it is all natural beauty at Glen Dornoch. Nature is saying to me- come back and see me again!

Crady's Eclectic Cuisine is a nice little place I came across in Conway, SC- tasty homemade lunches and desserts!

Crady’s Eclectic Cuisine is a nice little place I came across in Conway, SC- tasty homemade lunches and desserts!

That's all folks!

That’s all folks!

 

 

Isabela Seduced Me as I Hiked down to the Beach…

The path past the swimming pool was headed in the right direction—DOWN!

The path past the swimming pool was headed in the right direction—DOWN!

Catchy title I know but that is exactly what happened to me!

I am only using her first name here because she is part of a Royal Family.

The encounter was as innocent, as unintended as it could be. I was on assignment with Andy’s Golf & Travel Diary at Royal Isabela in Puerto Rico (oops I may have outed her). I have to make up for my lack of competence as a golf writer (and perhaps a lover) with preparation and thoroughness. In the future Royal Isabela will be expanding their golf course with the addition of three holes down on the beach. My task was simple—to venture down to the beach and get a feel for the setting. I awoke early in the morning and was summoned to take a walk down to the beach. The sun was just coming up. Jonathan Star’s Two Suns Rising, given me by Didier my yogi, was going to be apropos in my life after all.

Thee were exotic flowers to be observed along the way...

Thee were exotic flowers to be observed along the way…

I remembered how I was drawn to the beach at Royal Isabela the day before. I sensed her desire for me to explore her beach the first time I played the Golf Links. While walking up to the first green the blue Atlantic is visible through a V-shaped gap in the ridge. Her coast and sands are hidden from that vantage point though one knows her beach must be there. The waves coming inward, some cresting and breaking, must have a place to find rest. Once I learned of the future plans for ocean side holes and that there was a path for guests to descend to the beach I knew I had to venture to her sandy shores.

I remembered yesterday's view from above of the wide beach accessible through a V-shaped gorge.

I remembered yesterday’s view from above of the wide beach accessible through a V-shaped gorge.

On the back nine the beauty of the beach is fully exposed on most every hole. The vastness of the ocean lays below the golfer as we traverse the sandy plateau dressed up in green tees and fairways. Her putting greens are our only desire as golfers with club in hand. Her most enticing, most sought after feature are the 4-1/2 inch holes our golf balls roll into if we are skilled and fortunate at the game. The golfer quickly arrives at the edge of the cliff with a full view of the ocean and a rocky beach immediately below at the short 11th. Further north though one can see an indentation in the mountainous sides of the plateau and all of her wet and sandy beauty lays in the distance. Perhaps like the double 12th & 14th green above there will one day be a matching green pair below. Doubtful with only a threesome of holes that two would share a green. As  the ocean wind massaged my face, it was here at the bow of the back nine, that my yearning from within came to seek Isabela’s invitation to visit her at her lowest depths.

This sign gave me feedback that I was headed in the right direction.

This sign gave me feedback that I was headed in the right direction.

The best view of the beach is to the north or to the south, not down below for one cannot see the beach there unless one is at the very edge of the cliff looking straight down several hundred feet. The fear is too immense, the vegetation too slippery and dangerous to get that close to see the white of her beauty from straight above. Isn’t it as difficult for us to look straight in the mirror, straight into one’s own eyes. We easily focus on the hair or the makeup but not on the vastness within our or others’ pupils. Isabela was calling to me to come visit her ground zero, where her beauty and mystic ways began. I knew my chance might be tomorrow, in the early morning, just before departure from this golfing and living paradise. She was calling to me to discover yet another of her beautiful attributes. There was something more too. I was not sure what it was. I had an inkling it was something about me, not her.

The quality of the stonework on the path to the beach was of 'Isabela Quality.'

The quality of the stonework on the path to the beach was of ‘Isabela Quality.’

It wasn’t a risky trek down to the beach though my early morning thought was that we all have a common destiny—death. We are all destined to die hopefully surrounded by family and friends. But in the end, we take that step, like birth, alone and individually. I wondered if we will hear the call of our Lord like the roar of the sea to come home, to follow Him, to stay the path. I realized I didn’t know where I was going. I had  heard there was a path down to the beach and that is all I knew. It had to be close by being within the V-shaped gorge. I found a main path and walked it until it emerged near the first green and knew I had gone too far. I turned around and this time took a right past the secluded swimming pool and found a new path heading the right way- down hill. Why is it we think of directions as left or right and not up or down?

Wooden stairs took me safely down steep descents.

Wooden stairs took me safely down steep descents.

Ahead, after a few minutes I could see that the path ended in a circle area. There was a sign next to a gate referencing the gate as the gate to the beach so I was in the right place. Unlocked, I opened it and continued my odyssey downward to the beach. The path now became a series of connected stone steps and wooden platforms and steps. Stonework was utilized for the gradual descents while the woodwork was the choice of construction for the steep grades. The attention to detail and creative design of my new world embraced me as almost like being swept into a people mover at Disneyland. There were cliff walls to my left and jungle dropoffs to my right and only one way to go—down! I went merrily on my way with excitement to be answering Isabela’s call.

There was a small cave in the side of the cliff.

There was a small cave in the side of the cliff.

But I realized it was not only Isabela’s call but that of the ocean—its increasingly louder roar being amplified up the canyon as I drew closer. The face of the native Taino near the entrance to Royal Isabela where one turns off the main road came into my mind. I recalled the profile of another, or perhaps the same, indigenous person visible in the cliffs from the 12th tee. Am I walking a suspended pathway down through where they have walked since time began? I noticed a small cave in the side of the cliff and now wonder what native and wild animals lived in this slanted jungle between grounded civilization and watery wilderness. What if one were to suddenly appear? Would I jump over the railing and be more or less at risk in its native vegetation and landscape. Would the beast be more afraid than I? Though I felt inspired and that I was on the right path to my destination I still felt a bit of fear within the descending tunnel of jungle. What was happening was that simply the fear of the unknown was overcome by the excitement and joy of a new adventure. This was to be a new relationship with Isabela.

Bright and narrow was the path before me.

Bright and narrow was the path before me.

The way became narrower though brighter. I sensed I was getting somewhere. Most of the journey down to the beach was over or so I thought. They saw there is darkness before the dawn, calm before the storm but I haven’t heard anything about narrowness and brightness? It is always brighter once the sun comes up and now I was emerging from the darkness of the jungle and cliff encased descent to see that brightness of the risen sun. The one and only we think though we do not know. We know the corners of our rooms, the surface of our planet but not the edges of the universe or the depths of the sea. It is good to know what we do not know. If only we could remember that very one thing we do know when we think we know so much more about ourselves and others. I wonder what the native Tainos knew about Isabela, her land, her abundance and her love?

Once past the gate it was all unobstructed downhill to the beach.

Once past the gate it was all unobstructed downhill to the beach.

When I came to the end of the walkway there was a gate. It was locked shut with a chain. Funny how the entrance was unlocked and now once I am within my journey I find shackles which prevent me from exiting this phase and continuing on to the beach. I check my watch and according to my watch I am past opening time and before closing time. It makes sense if you could only lock one gate to lock the one closest to the perceived danger and farthest away from that which you are trying to protect and keep safe. I have a flashback to Rio de Janeiro on the Journey to Olympic Golf where I scaled a fence to  get closer to and get a better view of Sugarloaf Mountain. But that was after hours and I was encouraged to do so by a Carioca girl. When in Rio do as the Carioca girls tell you to do is my only South American slogan. As I pondered what to do next in my present situation the thought that time is relative came to me. Who really knows what time it is? Maybe I am off by an hour due to misinterpreting local daylight savings customs. That has happened to me before. Is time real or simply something we fabricated. Am I soon to be 55 years old or simply only 20 thousand-days young? Needing to get to the beach I hopped the gate. Moments later I said hello to the security guy who was coming up from the beach to open it for the day. I didn’t share my thoughts with him because they were frivolous and I knew he probably has other tasks to get to and do today.

When I reached the beach and saw another Taino face I realized both suns had risen for me that morning with Isabela.

When I reached the beach and saw another Taino face I realized both suns had risen for me that morning with Isabela.

So did I as I was leaving Royal Isabela later today and hoping to get nine more holes of golf in before I left. But this was important to do. To see where the future golf holes were to be designed and located. But I realized that I hadn’t thought of that, even once, since I left the casita. Here I was on some sort of ‘discovery of self’ journey. Somehow I was being seduced to do this and to continue on by Isabela herself. How could that be? It doesn’t make sense. I came for the golf, the room and the food. Let’s keep life simple, right? But what is life? Why are we on the path that we have chosen? How much time do we have left? These aren’t simple thoughts and questions, are they? But they seemed to be being answered for me as I made my way to the beach. Maybe it is simple? At that moment I was having the time of my life. I was clear and present in the moment. I was physically safe and sound but felt nothing physically. I was emotionally secure and balanced then though I know some readers might be questioning my sanity now. My thoughts were clear. In the background my mind was only being called to action to think for me when it seemed my soul needed it to. My soul was summoning and directing the mind to function when needed. How serene it was. Isabela had indeed seduced me into a state that quite frankly was better than other seductive states of being that I have been in.

Another native Taino face greeted me at the beach after two suns rose that morning at Isabela.

Another native Taino face greeted me at the beach after two suns rose that morning at Isabela.

I realized there is more to me to be discovered by me and others. The corners of our rooms are self imposed exiles from the true life that is innate within each of us. Any locked gate can be climbed over whether or not there is a Carioca girl present to encourage and help. That is fine if there is but we can do it ourselves too. Connecting with self can be a thrilling experience. To hear and answer the call from within can be as simple and as transforming as we want and need it to be.

There is something more within each of us, there when we seek it—a renewed spirit, another energized look at our lives and a commitment to live each day to its fullest knowing that the greatest gift in the world is to be alive. For me on that morning it was to be alive and embracing Isabela one more time in a closer, more meaningful manner than ever before. She’s mature now in all senses of life and understanding. It is the young and wise beauty of her that brings out the joy and gratitude in me. It’s a beautiful thing and I can’t wait to visit her again though this time I have taken a bit of her endless spirit, grace and beauty along with me deep within the heart she touched on that journey down to the beach early one morning.

I hope to return to see those three new golf holes and feel the warmth of Isabela once again.

I hope to return to see those three new golf holes and feel the warmth of Isabela once again.

Two suns rose for me that morning at Royal Isabela. When I reached the beach and went to the water I looked to the south and there in the cliffs I saw another Taino face. Similar but different than the one at the entrance and the one off the 12th tee further south. This one was right here, close by, next to me. I wondered how many dual sunrises he had witness in his lifetime. I wondered if he had ever read the following poem from Rumi placed as an introduction to Jonathan Star’s Two Suns Rising book?

 

I simply wonder and hope you do too…

 

What a day today.

There are two Suns Rising!

What a day.

Not like any other day.

Look!

The Light is shining in your heart.

The wheel of life has stopped.

Oh, you who can see into your own heart.

What a day.

This is your day.

— Rumi

Royal Isabela, Heaven on Earth, with More to Come…

Royal Isabella is all grown up with La Casa and 20 Casitas and more to come!

Royal Isabella is all grown up with La Casa and 20 Casitas and more to come!

Royal Isabela, Heaven on Earth with more to come. I first saw her as a baby toddler back in 2011. Now she is all grown up, a young beautiful woman, with a magnificent future in front of her. Royal Isabela is no different than the highly acclaimed graduate at a commencement exercise. You can see the doctor, the engineer, the lover of life within a vibrant, young and engaging entity of destiny. Three years ago when I visited Royal Isabela she was the location, the golf course and the visionary people building the finest golfing destination of the Caribbean Cosmos. Today our Isabela has gone well beyond where she was then. Royal Isabela is now a ‘home,’ a place to be one with yourself, your mate and nature. There are 20 casitas ready to host you. There is fine dining at La Casa as delectable to the appetite as the setting and views are to the golfing experience. With the spirit of the native Taino present on the land and sea and within you once there, she is Heaven on Earth. Yet she is only beginning, there is more to come, even more intimacy to come than I found on these first two visits. There is more there, past, present and future, than even I could fathom during my two cherished visits. Let me reminisce with you and take you back with me to Royal Isabela to experience all her delights and promises.

The Taino Indian face carved in the rock wall makes the turn to Royal Isabela. You are getting close and can feel her presence.

The Taino Indian face carved in the rock wall makes the turn to Royal Isabela. You are getting close and can feel her presence.

Whether you fly commercial into San Juan or a private jet into nearby Aguadilla there is a point where you turn the corner on Route 2 and the most beautiful part of all the 300 miles of Puerto Rican coastline lies before you. Where the beautiful blue waters of the Atlantic Ocean transition south to the Caribbean Sea, Isabela sits royally on the cliffs high above the surging waters. She knows her destiny is to welcome guests and share her heritage, peacefulness and beauty with them in a meaningful way. A century ago you could have arrived to this area via the national railroad through the Guajataca Tunnel. Today, take a right at the Taino Indian face carved in the rock wall. Welcome to Royal Isabela!

Like any other ultra highly acclaimed resort it is the people that make the difference at Royal Isabela. The people behind the scenes with the vision and the people one meets face-to-face in the course of a luxury vacation.

Good to see Stanley again and catch up on Royal Isabela's last three years and her future plans!

Good to see Stanley again and catch up on Royal Isabela’s last three years and her future plans!

For me, and likely for you when you visit, lucky are we who get to meet both. This isn’t going to come out sounding right, but like the golf course, owner Stanley Pasarell,  General Manager Joaquin ‘Tito’ Lopez, Director of Golf Miguel Suarez and Golf Course Superintendent Dean Vande Hei have all gotten better with time! It was good to be with old friends. Stanley looks fantastic and is beaming as any loving parent would be as Isabela continues to grow and mature. Tito, the man behind the scenes is managing better than ever as is evident with your visit to Royal Isabela. All one needs to say about Miguel is that this was the 7th Puerto Rico Open edition of the PGA TOUR on the Enchanted Island and this young man has competed in all seven. With regard to Dean, all one needs to see and play is the golf course in her Open links style condition and you will feel his loving contribution to Royal Isabela.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Stanley Pasarell and Dean Vande Hei.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Miguel Suarez.

Stanley's brother charlie was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2013. I have yet to meet him but feel I know him through Stanley and Royal Isabela.

Stanley’s brother charlie was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2013. I have yet to meet him but feel I know him through Stanley and Royal Isabela.

Can you tell I love these guys and this place?

This return trip, staying in the new casitas, upon reflection, was like the difference of visiting friends for dinner and an evening together versus being an exchange student and staying with a family for a few months. Casita No. 15 was my home for a few nights embedded in the golf links and a few steps from fine dining at the Restaurant at La Casa and the wet and wild beach below. Let’s focus on the accommodations, restaurant and golf for now. My interesting and seductive descent to the beach early my last morning there will be the subject of another story.

Plunge pool with an ocean view in each casita!

Plunge pool with an ocean view in each casita!

The casitas are immaculate, perfectly designed and incredibly comfortable. And the view of the Atlantic Ocean from every one is breathtaking. Whether it is opulent functionality or functional opulence it is a sensational experience to reside in the casita neighborhood at ‘Heaven on Earth.’ There is a circular course within each casita- from a bed so comfortable that it must be what it is like for an angel to sleep on a cloud, to the high tech living area, out to the deck with an inviting lounge chair for an afternoon nap, to being immersed in the refreshing private plunge pool, to returning inside via the shower room and through the lavish bathroom back to the open bed space. Second time around there is the door to the swimming pool, lap pool, beach, tennis court, golf course or La Casa. One of the finer, if not the finest, place I have ever stayed and I have stayed in quite a few!

Flashback to 2011 visit. With my buddy Pedro Amengual, golf writer Mike Bailey, Stanley and Tito at a local restaurant. FYI Mike won our match that day but I evened the series in Texas... Match No. 3 TBD...

Flashback to 2011 visit. With my buddy Pedro Amengual, golf writer Mike Bailey, Stanley and Tito at a local restaurant. FYI Mike won our match that day but I evened the series in Texas… Match No. 3 TBD…

Three years ago there was only golf and not a bed or plate on the property. Actually that is not true as I stayed with Stanley on my first visit in an existing house that was retrofitted into an office and lodge by the front gate. I also ate at The Grill at the Pro Shop with a beautiful view of the golf course. I still remember sitting there three years ago after playing the first nine eating a tasty panini. But let me tell you that the culinary delights at Royal Isabela rival the casita and golfing experience. It is true that the chef goes out to their farm and garden each morning to see what is ready to harvest. They do cook real food with real heat just in time for your watering mouth to be satisfied.

With Pastry Chef Katiria Nieves Diaz and Chef Jose Carles Fabregao. There food satisfies my hunger and is part of Royal Isabela's fascination and inspiration!

With Pastry Chef Katiria Nieves Diaz and Chef Jose Carles Fabregao. There food satisfies my hunger and is part of Royal Isabela’s fascination and inspiration!

While playing golf with Stanley he took care to point our the tropical fruit trees in the 5th fairway that bear heart-shaped Corazon. He spoke of their unique taste and evidently picked a few and snuck them into his golf bag sort of like my Dad up at Ely Park. Growing up there was always something in season to be picked- raspberries, apples, mushrooms, you name it! The next morning the ultimate host surprised me with Corazon hearts prepared for me to taste! They were exquisite with a mango-pineapple-pear taste and texture. At the end of the article I have attached a six pictures of the savory and succulent dishes prepared by Chef Jose Carles Fabregao and Pastry Chef Katiria Nieves Diaz. But of course, like sleeping in the bed in the casita, plunging into your own private pool, playing the golf links and absorbing the intimate comfort of Isabela, you will want to taste these and other dishes for yourself.

Aerial view of 17th green. Photo Credit: Royal Isabela (I can't get as high as John Denver!).

Aerial view of 17th green. Photo Credit: Royal Isabela (I can’t get as high as John Denver!).

Last, and of course first, in my mind- the golf, the golf, the golf! When Hollywood makes the Royal Isabela movie entitled ‘Heaven on Earth’ I want to play the part of Hervé Villechaize but instead of calling me ‘Tattoo,’ call me ‘Golf Redo Anytime Andy.’ The Tee, The Tee, The Tee! Seriously it is a vision of mine! What can I say but what I said when I first saw, played and experienced the Golf Links at Royal Isabela? I only infrequently use comparisons to other golf courses and always like to go beyond the words ‘awesome, spectacular and incredible’ with more details and texture to my experiences. But you may have experienced two golf courses either in person or while intimately watching others play them on television or seen them in golf picture books. The Golf Links at Royal Isabela, in my opinion, are similar to a combination of Pebble Beach Golf Links and the Old Course at St. Andrews. There I have said it without regret or offense to anyone because it is true.

CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW & Tour of the Golf Links with Stanley Pasarell.

Did I mention the sunsets on the links were spectacular and romantic for an evening walk upon arrival?

Did I mention the sunsets on the links were spectacular and romantic for an evening walk upon arrival?

The land, the cliffs, the proximity of and the view of the ocean is similar and even more natural and undeveloped than Pebble Beach. The golf course design, especially on the second nine, albeit only six years old, rival the grounds at St. Andrews. After all haven’t both been in existence the same length of time? Stand on the fairway of the 5th hole near those Corazon heart trees and laid out below you is a V-shaped gorge that centers the beauty of the Atlantic ocean like a vase overflowing with pure blue joy. Take a moment to do a full 360 at the point by the double 12th & 14th green as slow as you can opening each eye as wide as you can. And then do it again with your eyes closed and feel the ocean breeze gentle on your face. Have one day at Royal Isabela of golf, dinner and remember those sights and feelings before you close your eyes in the comfortable bed of a casita and I guarantee you your life will never feel the same.

My apology as I went off a little bit there but I was back at Royal Isabela in my mind as I am writing this. Golf is interchangeable with life for me. Not the sport (and it is a sport) but the inward searching expanse that golf offers to anyone who is open minded enough to view the game as I do. The name of this website should really be ‘Andy’s Golf, Life & Travel Diary.’ Hopefully the subtitle “Inspired by Golf & Life and Sharing My Experiences & Insight” will suffice for the limited digits of the title.

I digress no further at this point on my idiotic, I mean idyllic, life.

Sunrise along the future golf holes on the beach at Royal Isabela.

Sunrise along the future golf holes on the beach at Royal Isabela.

Royal Isabela is old enough now to have a past, present and future. As far as golf goes you can see her future through that same V-shaped gorge that we see the ocean through on the 5th hole. One day the links and the golfer will continue down that gorge and play three seaside holes, Nos. 6,7 & 8 before reemerging to finish the first nine on the Stanley-Charlie, you choose which green to play, par-5 hole (which is now No. 6) that brings you back to the clubhouse area. The second nine, all links and ocean side on the cliffs, remain the same and the current Nos. 7, 8 & 9 become warm up holes which in of itself is a  master design gem by golf course architect David Plaff and brothers Stanley and Charlie. Those three holes- a memorable dog-leg-right par-4, a strong straightaway par-5 with a green tucked right and protected by water and the island green par-3- are themselves a golf course in miniature. David, Stanley and Charlie didn’t take credit for the complete design. On the scorecard Mother Nature herself is credited. What a design foursome!

CLICK here for a BEAUTY VIDEO of Royal Isabela- the Golf Links, La Casa & View from Casita No. 15.

As far as the future at Royal Isabela, the culinary creations at the Restaurant at La Casa are as unlimited as what the ground can grow. If you are looking for a beautiful place to call home there are 29 homesites embedded amidst the links with a mind sure to preserve the views and sensitive intimacy of Royal Isabela. In that case La Casa truly becomes your home.

Like the migratory ‘Atlantea Tulita’ butterfly that disappears and then reappears at Royal Isabela I hope one day to make my way back to her loving arms. There is no doubt in my mind that she will have blossomed even further. Once onsite and in her enveloping presence she will take me some place new, within and outside myself. I think that is Isabela’s promise. There will be renewal, awakening and inspiration in each guest on every visit.

It has now happened to me twice!

CLICK here to see my 2011 article on my first visit to Royal Isabela.

Pictures below of the culinary delights to be found at Royal Isabela:

Carazon heart fruit was tasty, Note bite taken before picture!

Carazon heart fruit was tasty, Note bite taken before picture!

Two massive shrimp make a meal!

Two massive shrimp like these make a meal! One wonders about the origin of the nickname. There are big shrimp too!

Cordillera Coffee-Crusted Rib Eye, Served with Yucca and Plantain Gratin and Sautéed Organic Chard.

Cordillera Coffee-Crusted Rib Eye, Served with Yucca and Plantain Gratin and Sautéed Organic Chard.

Local Snapper with La Casa Grove Citrus Sauce, Accompanied by River Farm Chayote Slaw and Warm Gatehouse Garden Heirloom Tomato Salad.

Local Snapper with La Casa Grove Citrus Sauce, Accompanied by River Farm Chayote Slaw and Warm Gatehouse Garden Heirloom Tomato Salad.

Puerto Rican Farm-Raised Rack of Lamb with Acerola Mint Sauce, Served with a Tomato, Eggplant and Zucchini Tart.

Puerto Rican Farm-Raised Rack of Lamb with Acerola Mint Sauce, Served with a Tomato, Eggplant and Zucchini Tart.

For dessert Apple a la Royal Isabela mode!

For dessert Apple a la Royal Isabela mode!

Dorado Beach Resort & Club, Play like the Rockefellers!

Click here for the Dorado Beach Resort & Club website.

This is the view as you enter Plantation Village at Dorado Beach Resort & Club.

This is the view as you enter Plantation Village at Dorado Beach Resort & Club.

Puerto Rico is part of the United States of America and as easy, if not easier, to travel to than other parts of the country for a golfing and touring vacation. After an exciting week at the Puerto Rico Open presented by SeePuertoRico.com I made my way out to Dorado Beach in no time flat to visit with Chi Chi Rodriguez and enjoy golf, tranquility and the beautiful Caribbean beach! I stayed in Plantation Village in a spacious and elegant three-bedroom vacation resort residence with a spectacular view of the golf courses. Other than golfing I spent my time eating nearby at the Zafra restaurant (which means harvest time for the sugarcane) or jumping into the golf cart and arriving at a sensational beach a few minutes later. My only regret is not staying for the entire week as I missed out on the exclusive Watermill aquatic adventure park, the state-of-the art 8,000 square-foot Fitness and Wellness Center and more time on the beach and water sports!

Be sure to say hello to Mayra for me and mention ‘Andy’s Golf & Travel Diary.’

From the Dorado Beach Resort & Club website:

Welcome to Dorado Beach Resort! 

Dorado Beach is home to four legendary championship golf courses, plantation-style resort residences, world-class cuisine and beach activities for the whole family. This Caribbean beach resort has a storied tradition.

The famous East and West Golf Courses, originally designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr., are located in a secluded seaside sanctuary along two miles of Puerto Rico’s northeasterly shores, nestled within the former Rockefeller estate’s magnificent, mature landscaping.

These “must-play” Puerto Rico golf courses run through lush jungle and oceanfront coconut groves, challenging golfers of all types. After one picturesque round at any of Dorado Beach’s four golf courses, you’ll certainly find out what this first-class Puerto Rico golf resort is all about. If it’s more than golf that you’re looking for, Dorado Beach has that too.

This historic beach resort is the perfect place for a Caribbean wedding, corporate outing or a family beach vacation. We know you’ll marvel at our tropical beauty.

Spectacular accomodations in Plantation Village at Dorado Beach Resort & Club.

Spectacular accomodations in Plantation Village. Photo Credit: Dorado Beach Resort & Club

Ultra-refinement in hospitality; these modern-style Puerto Rican residences with soaring views of the Plantation Village Golf Courses and surrounding mountains capture the essence of Caribbean luxury resort residences and offer much more than the typical Caribbean hotel. Open spaces, elegant kitchens and spa-like bathrooms designed to complement contemporary life result in the perfect balance of form and function only offered at the Dorado Beach Resort. The modern contemporary décor of our private luxury condominiums are designed to satisfy the senses and fulfill all of your desires on your next luxury resort vacation.

Our three-bedroom vacation resort residences are currently available for long and short-term rental at Dorado Beach’s Plantation Resort for those seeking a Caribbean resort vacation destination unlike any other. For more information on renting a luxury villa at one of Puerto Rico’s finest resorts, please contact our reservations department at dbreservations@doradobeach.com or by phone at 787-626-1001.

Four Seasons Resort & Club Dallas at TPC Las Colinas

The statue of Byron Nelson looks normal size from 30 yards but up close his story is so inspirational it is bigger than life.

The statue of Byron Nelson looks normal size from 30 yards but up close his story is so inspirational it is bigger than life.

I went to Dallas to capture the Spirit of Byron Nelson. I spent three nights at the Four Seasons Resort & Spa in a villa overlooking the 18th green of the TPC Four Seasons Resort/Las Colinas Course. The HP Byron Nelson Championship has been in existence since 1944 when Byron Nelson won the inaugural event. Since 1983, when Ben Crenshaw won, it has been played on the TPC Las Colinas Course. There is golf history everywhere on this resort property but especially on the Byron Nelson Plaza where, in the watchful eye of a clock tower (Byron loved clocks), there is a nine foot statue of the Legend of Golf. What I realized is that when you are 30-40 yards away from Mr. Nelson’s statue he looks almost mortal, no bigger than any of the golfers that pass by, even another charter member of The Sports Club, also named Byron Nelson (true fact, no relation). But when you come closer, talk to folks who knew him personally and absorb the memorabilia in Champions Hall you get a sense of the Spirit of Byron Nelson.

CLICK here for Part 1 of a Video Interview with Tim Cusick, Director of Golf Instruction, Four Seasons Resort & Spa Dallas.

CLICK here for Part 2 of a Video Interview with Tim Cusick, Director of Golf Instruction, Four Seasons Resort & Spa Dallas.

Andy Reistetter with Vail Tolbert, Director of Public Relations at the Four Seasons Resort & Club Dallas.

Andy Reistetter with Vail Tolbert, Director of Public Relations at the Four Seasons Resort & Club Dallas.

I received an awesome tour of the property from Vail Tolbert, the Director of Public Relations. Then  I interviewed Tim Cusick, the Director of Golf Instruction and Rob Cowan, The Sports Club Manager along with the other Byron Nelson, an amateur member of the Sports Club.

CLICK here for a Video Interview with Rob Cowan, Manager of the Sports Club, Four Seasons Resort & Spa Dallas.

CLICK here for a Video Interview with Byron Nelson, an amateur member of the Sports Club with a familiar name.

The highlight, of course, was playing the TPC Four Seasons Las Colinas course (no pun intended). My playing partners were Tom Horan, host of the popular Golf Talk America radio program “Speaking of Golf,” and a delightful father Steve & son Joey duo from Denver, Colorado. We surely felt the presence of Byron on his golf course at his home club.

CLICK here for a Video Interview with Tom Horan, host of “Speaking of Golf” on the 17th tee at TPC Four Seasons Las Colinas.

I had the pleasure of corresponding with Mrs. Peggy Nelson who I met at the 2010 BNC when she released her book, Life with Lord Byron: Laughter, Romance, and Lessons Learned from Golf’s Greatest Gentleman. Here is a Q&A with Mrs. Nelson:Andy Reistetter, Journey to Olympic Golf:   What are your personal thoughts about the Olympics? What is your favorite event, favorite Olympian, most memorable moment and why? Did you and Byron watch them on TV or ever attend in person? Do you have any recollection of conversations you had with Byron about the Olympics in general?

Mrs. Nelson:     Byron and I always admired Olympic athletes and the dedication and sacrifice it takes for both them and their families to reach that highest point of endeavor, no matter which sport it is.  My favorite event would be figure skating, and Peggy Fleming was quite a heroine for me–I was honored to meet her one day many years ago and she was so lovely and gracious–every inch the champion still.  Of course, her Olympic victory was before the event became so prodigiously athletic with all the requirements for multiple jumps, so grace and fluidity were more important.

Byron and I never attended an Olympic event  but watched quite a bit on TV, and were always amazed at the talent and determination the athletes displayed.  We didn’t talk about it a lot nor do I recall Byron saying anything specific about the events, though he enjoyed watching.  I think he liked the summer sports more, because he was never a fan of cold and snow!

Andy Reistetter, Journey to Olympic Golf:     Byron played on two Ryder Cups and captained a third team. What did it mean to him to play for his country? What emotion would characterize it best? What thought or story was his favorite about the Ryder Cup?

Mrs. Nelson:     Byron loved playing and captaining in the Ryder Cup–he said being selected captain by the team was the greatest honor he ever received in golf.  Of course, he loved America and so was very proud to play for the USA; at the same time, when the Ryder Cup was held in Portland, Oregon in ’47 and the British team’s expenses were provided by an American. Byron was very pleased to be part of that team as well as being glad the competition could resume.  As for stories, you might check his autobiography How I Played the Game, because there are several in there.

Andy Reistetter with Mrs. Peggy Nelson at the 2010 BNC.

Andy Reistetter with Mrs. Peggy Nelson at the 2010 BNC.

Andy Reistetter, Journey to Olympic Golf:     Golf will be played in the Olympics for the first time in 112 years in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. In your opinion, what would it have meant to Byron to be an Olympic Golfer? How do you think he would have defined the “Olympic Spirit for Golfers?” How would it have differed, if in any way, from his Ryder Cup experience?

Mrs. Nelson:     One of the things Byron admired about both the Ryder Cup and the Olympics was the spirit of good sportsmanship that pervades both types of competition.  I don’t know that he ever realized there had been golf in the Olympics so long before he was even born, but he surely would have loved to be on the American team–well, if he could maybe have qualified ….!

Good luck with your Olympic Story!

Peggy Nelson

Thank you Mrs. Peggy Nelson for your wonderful insight and sharing Byron with his admiring golf fans through your book and theses responses.   Andy Reistetter, Journey to Olympic Golf

Here are my pictures and comments from this inspirational visit to the professional home of Byron Nelson:  

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