Asia/Pacific Golf Vacations

You wouldn't think this small, remote island would have a golf course, but it does.

While working on an upcoming golf travel tip, I stumbled upon a remote island I had never heard of before.

At only 50 square miles, this island sits like a speck in the middle of the Indian Ocean.

It doesn’t have any kind of economy to speak of.

It doesn’t even have a full network of paved roads.

But it does have a golf course.

And someone you know quite well will be playing there in five days. Read more →

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Carbrook Golf Club has 10-foot bull sharks living in its water hazards.

You may have heard about this the first time it buzzed around the Internet, but it’s too good not to share in case you missed it.

At a golf course in Australia, sharks have invaded the water hazards.

I’m not talking about little sand sharks that you can almost catch with your hands.

I’m talking about huge bull sharks that can easily take your hands off while reaching in for a golf ball.

You have to see this to believe it. Read more →

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Lost Farm, the new course at Tasmania's Barbougle Dunes, opens in December. (Photo courtesty of Barnbougle Dunes

It may be the beginning of the end of the year, but 2010 has one more major gift to give us golf travelers.

The most recent one, of course, was Old Macdonald, the fourth layout at Oregon’s fantastic Bandon Dunes Resort.

Well, the new course I’m talking about is of similar magnitude.

In fact, some people say its name and “Bandon Dunes” in the same breath.

When you see where it is, what it looks like, and who’s involved, you probably will, too.  Read more →

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If you’re one of my readers interested in playing golf courses ranked in the world top-100, you’re going to want to pay special attention to today’s tip.

That’s because it explains how, in a single trip — and within a two-hour radius of a single city — you can play four of the world’s top-100 golf courses, plus a fifth that arguably should be on the list.

Four of these five courses are completely private, but you’ll be able to play them anyway.

These courses are located someplace you may never have considered visiting, but it makes for a golf vacation you probably won’t be able to stop talking about for the rest of your life. Read more →

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The Tiger-less PGA Tour may have packed up its tent for the 2008 season, but there is a new televised golf tournament coming up that you don’t want to miss.

It’s called the Kiwi Challenge (thekiwichallenge.com), and it pits four of the world’s best under-30 golfers — Ryder Cuppers Anthony Kim and Hunter Mahan,

<center>See Cape Kidnappers (above) and Kauri Cliffs on TV November 16th and 17th.</center>

See Cape Kidnappers (above) and Kauri Cliffs on TV November 16th and 17th.

Masters standout Brandt Snedeker, and Adam Scott — against each other in a two-day, stroke-play tournament across two of the best New Zealand golf courses: Kauri Cliffs and Cape Kidnappers.

While I’m sure there will be some beautiful shotmaking to see, an almost better reason to tune in to NBC this Saturday and Sunday is to see the amazing beauty shots of these New Zealand golf courses, especially if you’ve ever considered taking a New Zealand golf vacation (which, as we explained in the January 2008 issue of Golf Odyssey, is much easier than people think).  Read more →

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Jun.

3
2008

Where in the World is Barnbougle Dunes?

by Craig Better

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<center>Barnbougle Dunes is a must-play on an Australia golf vacation.</center>

Barnbougle Dunes is a must-play on an Australia golf vacation.

If you watched the telecast of the PGA Tour’s Memorial Tournament this past weekend, you probably heard the announcers say that Matt Goggin, who ultimately finished tied for second place, hails from Tasmania.

Like any reasonable person, you were probably wondering: 1) Where the heck is Tasmania? And, 2) Do they even have golf courses there?

Normally, I’d be wondering right along with you. Heck, until last year, my knowledge of Tasmania began and ended with that ravenous, whirling dervish from Bugs Bunny cartoons.  Read more →

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I’ve seen golf balls blown sideways at St. Andrews and I’ve lost hats at Lahinch, but nothing prepared me for what I recently experienced at Cape Kidnappers, the magnificent New Zealand golf course designed by Tom Doak.

This video was taken as our group began playing famous holes 11-16, which sit atop “fingers” that extend into the crashing waves of the Pacific Ocean…500 feet below! To help put this in perspective, consider that Old Head in Ireland sits 300 feet above the Atlantic. And those famous cliffs at Pebble Beach? A mere 100 feet above Carmel Bay.

Of course, it wasn’t a fear of heights that wreaked havoc on my game, it was the wind blowing in excess of 120 kph (about 75 mph). Not only did I lose more balls in this one round than I lost all of last year, I think this was the first time I’ve ever had to “play the wind” on putts.  Read more →

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<center>Even if you can't play this private course on your New Zealand golf vacation, its clubhouse is a must-see.</center>

Even if you can't play this private course on your New Zealand golf vacation, its clubhouse is a must-see. (Photo by Peter Sundstrom, flickr.com/psundstrom)

A New Zealand man has devised an innovative solution to the unfortunate but all-too-common practice of building houses on golf courses: he’s hiding them underneath.

Jewelry magnate Michael Hill plans to build 17 luxury, mostly underground homes on, er, in The Hills golf course which he owns and is this week hosting the New Zealand Open (officially, the Michael Hill New Zealand Open) a European Tour event. Somehow, I don’t think this is what people mean when they refer to “living in a bunker.”  Read more →

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