By
John Reger
You’re having breakfast on the teak veranda of your suite aboard
the Silver Whisper, Silversea’s newest six-star floating hotel. The port of Nice
slowly comes into view as you mentally prepare for your round at Royal
Mougins Golf Club, one of the finest courses in Europe.The previous day,
you teed off at one of Spain’s best, the heather-lined PGA Golf de Catalunya,
before embarking on a seven-day Mediterranean cruise out of Barcelona. And
tomorrow, after a five-course meal in Le Champagne, an onboard oenophile’s
delight, followed by some gambling in the ship’s casino as you cruise the
French Riviera, you’ll play Le Fregate Golf Club, with its stunning views of the
Mediterranean. If Pebble Beach is “the most felicitous meeting of land and
sea in creation,” as Robert Louis Stevenson reportedly once said, these floating
country clubs may just be the most luxurious. And they combine the best of
both kinds of golf vacations. Like road trips, you can play a variety of courses
from day to day. At the same time, you can benefit from the convenience,
amenities and luxury of a resort stay—everything you need, including
port-to-course transportation, is included. While the Mediterranean is
certainly one of the most desirable destinations, there are plenty of
itineraries available to seafaring golfers. Silversea, which offers large-ship
amenities aboard intimate vessels, drops anchor at 45 courses in 25
countries aboard 15 cruises throughout Europe, the Caribbean and Mexico. The
10-day “Caribbean Kaleidoscope” voyage, which departs in late October from
F.t Lauderdale, Florida, boasts Casa de Campo’s Teeth of the Dog in the
Dominican Republic and White Witch in Jamaica, among others, on its itinerary.
Peter Deilmann Cruises offers a 20-day golf cruise from Phuket, Thailand, to
Hong Kong aboard the six-deck, 513-passenger MS Deutschland, which gives the
feel of a grand European hotel and has two putting greens and a driving range
topside. Courses of call include Raffles Country Club in Singapore and China’s
Mission Hills, the world’s largest golf resort with 10 courses.
If the open ocean makes you queasy, consider a Deilmann
cruise up the
Rhine,
Rhone, Seine, Danube or Elbe rivers in one its
100-passenger, luxuriously cozy
boats with one
crewmember for
every 2.5
passengers. One
operator,
Kalos Golf, is
devoted entirely to the swinging set.
Its 11-day Riviera cruise sets
sail along
the
legendary coast
from France to Italy—and we do mean
sail. The
Sea Cloud, the
largest private sailing ship ever built, has a
fascinating
history. After making
his money the
old-fashioned
way—earning
it, of course—E.F. Hutton built the
360-foot, four-masted
barque for his bride, cereal
heiress Marjorie Merriweather
Post, in
1931. Guests
these days feel no less important thanks
to a
passenger
limit and the wonderful attention to detail
aboard the
elegant 32-cabin cruise
ship
extraordinaire. For its two week-long
New
Zealand
cruises, Kalos employs
the Orion, a
boutique liner
with 53 staterooms
and an intoxicating mixture
of grandeur and
intimacy. Among the stops
are two of
the finest courses
anywhere: Kauri Cliffs and Cape
Kidnappers. Back aboard
the Silver
Whisper
following a round at Saint Cyprien high
in the
Pyrenees, a hot lava
rock massage in the spa
is the perfect treatment
for
working out the
kinks.
If that doesn’t work, you can
always book a lesson with
the
ship’s resident instructor,
Glenn Collins, while the ship is
at sea the
next day.Following a cabaret performance in
the ship’s Show Lounge and a
visit to the Champagne Room for some fine
grappa and cigars, your final rounds
are on two of Italy’s best,
Cosmopolitan Country Club and Le Querce Golf Course.
You’re apt to
shout, Bellissimo! As the sun sets over the horizon
on the last
evening of the cruise, you can enjoy a drink on the
Observation Lounge atop the
10-deck liner before your final gourmet
meal, recalling your every shot—the
perfect end to one of the most
luxurious, memorable golf vacations of your life.
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