Entries Tagged as 'Scottish'

Play the British Open Venues with a Scottish Golf Break

Scotland plays host a large number of golf courses, several of which are so renowned that they form part of the golf course rotation for the British Open championship; one of the game’s four major championships.

From its inception in 1860 the British Open was organised by and played at Prestwick Golf Club in Ayrshire, Scotland but from 1872 the tournament was played according to a rotating course schedule. Initially, the schedule featured three courses – Prestwick, St. Andrews and Musselburgh which were all situated in Scotland. However, in 1893, two additional golf courses were added to the list – both in England. These courses were Royal St. George’s and Royal Liverpool Golf Club, also known as Hoylake. Both these courses feature on the current rotation along with St. Andrews, although Prestwick and Musselburgh are no longer part of the schedule.

Since 1893, other golf courses have been added to the rotation while others have been dropped. In all there are nine golf courses which make up the current list of venues; 5 in Scotland and 4 in England.

In Scotland, the courses which form the Open rotation are the Old Course, St. Andrews; Carnoustie Golf Links; Muirfield; Turnberry Ailsa and Royal Troon. Golfers looking to tackle these and other courses in their immediate area can do so by booking a Scottish golf break which offers the chance for handicap golfers to walk in the footsteps of some of the games most illustrious players, such as Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, Ben Hogan, James Braid, Sandy Lyle and Tiger Woods.

Each of the golf courses on the Scottish rotation are easily accessible from Scotland’s major airports and golf breaks in Scotland normally include travel costs, accommodation and green fees for the course so all you need once you arrive is your golf clubs and afterwards, your wallet in order to slake your thirst at the 19th hole.

Carnoustie is situated in the Angus region of Scotland, and represents a tough test for even the best golfer. It last held the Open in 2007, which was won by Ireland’s Padraig Harrington. Like all courses on the Open list, Carnoustie is a links golf course, and is very difficult when the wind blows!

For St. Andrews, book a golf break in Fife. The Old Course is known as the ‘home of golf’ and is perhaps the most famous golf course in the world and hosts the Open every fifth year and is due to return in 2010. Beware of the infamous ‘Roadhole bunker’!

For Royal Troon and Turnberry Ailsa, look for a golf break in Ayrshire. The Ayrshire coast has many other golf courses besides and Turnberry Ailsa will be the scene of the 2009 British Open. Some of the most memorable Open finales have been played on Ayrshire’s Open venues, including the 1977 ‘Duel in the Sun’ at Turnberry, where Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus went head-to-head for the championship.

Murfield is situated in the town of Gullane, to the east of Edinburgh and is one of the oldest golf courses in the UK. Muirfield is considered to be the fairest test of all the Open venues, although it is far from being an easy course to play. Two circuits of nine holes rotate in opposite directions with the back nine looping inside the front nine, meaning no two consecutive holes are played in the same wind direction. Golfers looking to take on Muirfield’s challenge should Explore Edinburgh golf breaks and in particular the East Lothian region for a Muirfield golf tour, but be aware that the club only allows a certain number of visitors during the week so if Muirfield is on your list of courses to play, it’s always best to check beforehand that you will have the chance.

Whichever Open course you want to play, Scottish golf breaks can give you the chance to follow in the footsteps of some of golf’s greatest names and can provide a golfing experience you’ll never forget!

A keen golfer and writer, Brian Healy writes this article for Your Golf Travel, an operator of UK golf breaks and also around the world. Learn more about Scotland golf holidays here.

Great Golf Courses And Golfing History – Murfield – The Honourable Edinburgh Scottish Golfers

The well known as well as venerable golfing course at Muirfield Scotland has had the honor of being ranked highly among the great golf courses of the world – first in Golf Magazines ” among the top 100 golf courses in the world” in 1983 and then ranked both second and fifth in that very same poll in 1987 and 1989. This while all the while the Muirefeld golf course held its lead as the number one golf course in the British Isles. The Muirfeld golf course itself has a long tradition and is known well as for its most difficult golf “routing plan”. This world famous as well as historic golf center is laid out in a structure resembling a “circle within a circle” making for winds that can come and play torment to any avid golfer’s golf ball from any of a number of unpredictable directions.

Not only that but this magnificent and historic golf course is home to the Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers, known as the world’s oldest continuous golf club. The Honorable Company is the direct descendant of a group of golfers known as “The Gentleman Golfers of Leith”. This group played at Leith Links (to the west of Edinburgh) which were first used as golf links in 1593.

Historical accounts place the Gentleman Golfers of Leith as formally recognized by the Edinburgh Town Council on March 7, 1744, who further presented the group with a silver golf club for an annual golf contest. With this formal recognition, the Gentleman Golfers set down a list of 13 golfing rules and began maintaining what has by now become the oldest continuous record kept by any golfing club in the world.

The list of rules that they set down, originally titled “Articles and Laws on Playing Golf” became known a the Leith Code , and became the first set of golfing rules to be written down, It was so reasonable and efficacious that The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews adopted it when their organization was formed in 1754.

These Gentleman Golfers were sometimes later formalized as the Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers. In 1836 they moved from the five-hole Leith Links to the links at Mussenburgh on the east of Edinburgh. It seems that Musselburgh itself had been a golfing ground from at least 1672.

It was at Musselburgh in 1873 that The Honorable Company consented to an agreement – with the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, and Prestwyck Golf Club (who hosted the first Open Championship in 1860) – for the staging of the Open Championship at Musselburgh, the Old Course at St. Andrews and Perswyck, on a yearly rotational basis.

A little over half a century after the Honorable Company had begun play at Musselburgh, they migrated once again ( taking their position at the Open with them ) to Muirfield ( yet even further east on the Firth of Forth), which the Honorable Company developed for golf, and opened for play on 3, May 1891.

Muirfield’s seaside location and picturesque surroundings, offer an aesthetic banquet second to none. It has been said that the Muirfeld golf course is as close to perfection as is ever availed to earth, sky, sea and golfing skill.

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