Posts Tagged ‘golf breaks’

2010 Open Championship at St Andrews

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Any golfer worth his or her clubs knows of the town St Andrews, Scotland, where golf was first played in the 15th century. 600 or so years later, the eyes of the golfing world will once again all be on St Andrews when the Open Championship returns there on 15-18 July 2010.

Playing at St Andrews Golf Coursecredit

St Andrews has an ancient history that stretches back to the Bronze Age. The area was settled by prehistoric hunter-gatherers and by Celtic peoples, and was also the site of Roman military camps. The town received its name when relics of St Andrew, Scotland’s patron saint, were brought there during the Dark Ages, and it became the seat of the Bishop of Alba and an important religious centre for newly Christianised Scotland. The modern town of St Andrews was established in 1140 by Bishop Robert.

However, St Andrews’s religious influence suffered a severe blow during the disruptions of the Scottish Reformation and the Civil War of the 17th century, and the town did not recover until the 19th century. And one of the factors that helped St Andrews begin growing again was golf. No one is quite sure when golf was first played in the area, but it was likely sometime in the 1400s.

Ancient writings testify to the popularity of golf even then. 1754 saw the founding of the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, which grew into the modern governing body of golf and the Open’s hosts, the R&A. Today, St Andrews Golf Club has seven world-class, publicly owned golf links, and it is only a slight exaggeration to say that every golfer dreams of the chance to play a round at St Andrews, particularly on the Old Course, home of the Open.

Tiger Woods at St Andrews Golfcredit

The 2010 Open Championship will feature some of golf’s best players. As of this writing, qualifying tournaments are still going on around the world, but many great golfers are already expected at St Andrews, including champion Tiger Woods, Tom Watson (the 2009 runner-up), John Daly, Ernie Els, Vijay Singh, David Duval, and Ben Curtis. If you are travelling to St Andrews for the Open, be sure to book early! Hotels will be filled to overflowing once players, spectators, and media start arriving.

Fortunately, St Andrews is a popular tourist destination and has many excellent lodgings available. If you have well-lined pockets, you can choose from 5-star St Andrews golf hotels such as the Old Course Hotel and the St Andrews Bay Golf Resort, but there are many other hotels, guesthouses, and B&Bs to choose from, both in St. Andrews and the surrounding Fife region. This includes Birkhill Castle, home to the Earl and Countess of Dundee, which provides lodging to corporate and private groups, as well as B&B service to individuals.

Golf Breaks: Why Scotland is the Ultimate Destination

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Scotland is the undisputed home to all things golf and offers tourists, and locals, the best golf breaks in the world. What is now a sporting phenomenon is popularly said to have originated in 12th century Scotland when a group of shepherds decided to knock a few stones into some rabbit holes with sticks.

The game just took off from there and became so popular that, in 1452, King James II banned his subjects from playing golf as it kept them from their archery practice.

The Beginnings of Popular Golfcredit

The two oldest golf clubs in Scotland, being Muirfield’s Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers and the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews,  were founded in 1744 and 1754 respectively and the structure of the game soon settled in to what we know it as today. Golf was originally played with more or less than 18 holes but, when decided as such by St Andrews, an 18-hole game of golf soon became the norm.

A dream golf break for any golfer would be to take a golf break in Scotland and spend time at St Andrews to play the Old Course. The links style of golf course is the oldest in the world and was, of course, developed in Scotland.

St Andrew's Golf Coursecredit

Most links courses are found in coastal areas where the natural hazards comprise high and unpredictable winds and uneven fairways. Famous links courses include Bruntsfield in Edinburgh, Muirfield in East Lothian and Prestwick in South Ayrshire. It would be worth planning a golf break to Scotland even from Outer Mongolia just to play a round or two of golf on these venerable courses.

Scottish golf courses are the most beautiful in the world and are steeped in the history and tradition of the sport. Scotland also hosts the Open Championship three out of every five years and Open courses are also available to the casual golfer. So on your next golf break, why not try the Mussellburgh Old Course, which has been confirmed as the oldest course in the world by Guinness World Records.

It would, however, be foolish to spend all your golf breaks putting around famous Scottish courses as some of the most beautiful and exiting to play are the lesser known ones, which include Cromwell’s Dunbar in North Berwick and Roxburghe near Kelso on the Scottish Borders. Hitting stones into rabbit holes has given everyone so much pleasure that it will be around for many years to come.