Golf Travel Golf Courses Golf Real Estate the best of golf
Home > Golf Travel > International > Ireland Golf Travel > Scotland vs. Ireland
More than 50 courses have sprouted in Ireland since 1990, and nearly all of them offer a warm welcome to traveling golfers. Two of the newest and most impressive are at Carton House, 14 miles west of Dublin Airport in the town of Maynooth. Within the stone walls of an 1,100-acre estate that was the ancestral home of the Fitzgeralds, Earls of Kildare, are two courses, one a parkland layout by Mark O'Meara that weaves through specimen trees and alongside several ponds and streams. Holes 13 through 15, two par 3s sandwiching an heroic par 5, are just as fetching and almost as demanding a stretch as Augusta's Amen Corner.

The other course, the one that's getting most of the attention, is by Colin Montgomerie. It's an exposed, low-lying, links-type layout, lined with tall grass and hungry bunkers. The Irish Golf Union will soon make its home at Carton House, and once the old manor and attendant lodges are fully outfitted, this place will probably become golf destination No. 1 in greater Dublin. But surely the course in the Dublin area that has assumed the highest profile is the one by Arnold Palmer and Ed Seay at the Kildare Hotel & Country Club, known worldwide as the K Club, site of the 2006 Ryder Cup.

To put it bluntly, this was the most disappointing course on my visit and one of the most overrated I've ever played. If you're seeking a true Irish experience, don't bother to play the K Club. It's Florida golf—think Doral on drugs—with water everywhere along with a series of intentionally obscured tee shots, hard-to-decipher doglegs and repelling greens. How Darren Clarke managed to shoot 60 there in the 1999 Irish Open I'll never fathom—I had 60 by about the 11th hole. Let's just say the K course was a strikeout with me.

But the rest of the place was a knockout. The accommodations at Straffan House, around which the Palmer course plays, were impeccable in all respects, as befits Ireland's only AA Five Red Star hotel. The hot bath, superb meal and bottle of wine were just what I needed after the ego-bruising I'd suffered. And to be fair there's a second, kinder/gentler course on the property.Subsequent stays at Rathsallagh House, Adare Manor, Ashford Castle and Dromoland Castle affirmed that Ireland can match any destination in the world for first-class lodging, food and service. All four of those establishments have fine parkland courses on their grounds, the two best being Adare, where in 1995 the late Robert Trent Jones crafted the last of his more than 400 designs; and Dromoland, where Ron Kirby and Joe Carr just completed a masterful reconfiguration.

Taken together with Jack Nicklaus' Mount Juliet; the three lakeside classics down south at the Killarney Golf Club; and—the best of them all—Druids Glen by Pat Ruddy and Tom Craddock, there's a compelling case for the supremacy of Ireland in parkland golf. In reply, Scotland has only the courses at Gleneagles, Blairgowrie and the super-private Loch Lomond.

But winning that battle is like winning the JV scrimmage, so let's get to the main event: the grand and glorious links courses we Americans cross the Atlantic to play.


continued on page 3...
page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7
Prince Edward Island Canada Golf Travel Feature:
Prince of an Island
A slip of land off Nova Scotia's coast offers proof that the road less traveled can lead to some very good golf
read more »
Jasper Park Lodge Canada Golf Travel Vacation Classic Courses:
Jasper Park Lodge
Deep in the Canadian Rockies this 83-year-old showpiece of Stanley Thompson architecture continues to inspire
read more »
Fenton Tower Edinburgh Scotland Golf Travel Vacaction Destination:
Edinburgh Enclave
Edinburgh, Scotland
read more »
Scotland Golf Travel by Train Travel Journal:
Making Tracks
Evoking the romance of a bygone era with an old-fashioned golf journey via rail along Scotland’s east coast
read more »
St  Andrews Grand Golf Travel Real Estate Destination:
St Andrews Grand
If real estate is all about location, it’s hard to find a better site than the St. Andrews Grand at the Old Course.
read more »

18 Holes at Harvest Times
Come autumn, the rugged hills of western Massachusetts and Vermont form a blazing backdrop for golf and personal reflection
read full story »

Ultimate Resort Experiences
A great golf resort provides guests with total rejuvenation amid unsurpassed luxury. Here are nine resorts with standard-setting amenities
read more »
subscription center

subscribe now
Sign Up for our Free LINKS Insider E-Newsletter
e-brochures
view all
Ultimate Resort
Ultimate Resort
Ultimate Resort
advertisement
 
home | site map | subscribe to LINKS Magazine | subscription changes | feedback | contact us | advertising information | order back issues | get FREE information | links e-newsletter registration | links partners | privacy policy | terms and conditions