My last visit coincided with the Sunday of Dubliner Padraig Harrington’s
victory at Carnoustie in the British Open. I was fortunate to be the
only
American in the dining room as a properly partisan crowd flocked
to the high-def
telly.
In a sweet Rockwellian scene, freckled juniors sat closest to the
screen near young mothers balancing pink babies and plates of roast
beef on
their laps. Under-40 dads lined one wall, and with every
Harrington surge
broke out half-jokingly in the unified Irish rugby
anthem “Ireland’s Call.”
Ireland, Ireland,
Together standing tall
Shoulder to shoulder
We’ll
answer Ireland’s call.
In the back row, loving all the splendid craic and chatting about their
morning four-balls, silver-haired couples seemed as happy in this
intergenerational Irish golf moment as if it were a family reunion. I
would not
have traded my seat for one at Carnoustie.
As soon as Harrington vanquished
Sergio Garcia, my three hosts and I
bolted to the 1st tee. Gordon Bell, Stewart
Johnston and Frank
O’Donoghue—club captain, president and chairman of course
development,
respectively—walked me past the leaky clubhouse, which is being
razed
to make room for a grand $6 million design, including new women’s
lockers.
“We’ve been debating it for 10 years,” says Bell, who has lived most
of his life within a mile of the club, “but we had 470 members show up
for the
last vote, and it was 10 to one in favor.”
My hosts were excited to explain
that English architect Martin
Hawtree, famous for his thoughtful restorations at
Lahinch, Portmarnock
and several British Open venues, is renovating several
holes. Like the
best of Colt’s creations, the original 1929 layout is a visual
joy from
the 1st hole, with ingenious bunkering and crafty approach-shot angles,
although with more trees than Colt would probably like. Like Donald
Ross, his
contemporary, Colt masterfully used tree lines and elevation
changes to
effortlessly bend the golfer’s eye to where a great tee ball
should land. No
visual tomfoolery here.
Belvoir Park’s strengths are lengthy, heavily
bunkered par 3s, three
humbling finishing holes that rank among the best in
Ireland, and a
quartet of mighty, uphill and downhill par 4s—the 428-yard 3rd,
434-yard 7th, 483-yard 12th and 439-yard 17th.
The grueling 12th, often
thought of as Belvoir’s best, looks less
than menacing at first because the
ample oak-lined fairway plummets
downward from the tee into a creek that crosses
and runs parallel to
the hole. Crush your drive, avoid the water, favor the
left side—and
you’ve only conquered the easy part. The hard part is an
approach of
180–210 yards from a downhill lie to a distant uphill green that
slopes
right to left and away from your approach shot. But venture a wee bit
right and you’re cast into two daunting greenside bunkers.
“It’ll take three
great shots,” sly members say of the 12th, “to get
on in two.”
Best advice:
Enjoy your well-earned bogey and the pastoral
elegance of the
surrounding Antrim Hills.
“Our course’s weakness,” admits O’Donoghue, a
Belfast attorney with
a graceful swing, “has been the par 5s. At 513, 493, 479
and 509 yards
they could simply no longer defend against the modern ball and
golf
club.” Hawtree will expand them, bringing the course to roughly 7,000 yards
from 6,597. He also will enlarge and reshape some lackluster greens
before
Belvoir hosts the Irish Amateur Close tournament in June
2008.
On the
stillest of Belfast summer evenings, we walked fairways that
were patrolled at
night during World War II by Belfast volunteers
called the Home Guard, who,
while trolling for Germans certainly must
have worked on their swings. Just
across the street from the Belvoir
entrance is the impressive Knockbreda Parish
Church, a mere 270 years
old. Down the road is the three-story Pavilion Bar
(“the Big House” to
locals), featuring indie rock and plasma televisions.
If
you ever become a member you’ll get to wear a sweater with the
historic and
perhaps whimsical Belvoir Park crest, which features a
bat—the flying kind—with
the Latin motto: Nocte Volamus.
We fly by night.