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- A
typical Golf Holiday
destination is Phuket
Thailand.
Play beach golf or rather
close to a beach. There are
plenty of golf specials and
a great golf package
available for golf holiday
in Thailand. Other golf
breaks could be made in
Malaysia and even a very
exotic one at Myanmar golf.
There are golf resorts
available practically at all
golf holidays destinations
and a golf hotel is also
easy to find including a
golf shop for everything
needed.
In every large town in
Thailand you will
find a Golf Club. Golf
courses for a golf holiday
have been spreading over the
country, and especially in
southern Thailand, in the
last few years and the
island
of Phuket in
south Thailand has some of
the best and most
interesting golf clubs for
golf holiday on this planet.
Golf doesn’t need any
upscale technology to learn,
there is no need to have a
lot of muscles
or extensive training and
you can have a relaxed chat
on the green. Visitors will come here
-usually- from up to five
flight hours radius to enjoy
their passion. There are
several excellent golf
courses, golf clubs and golf
estates with integrated
hotel, villas or apartment
on Phuket island. Maybe you
enjoy a combination of golf
holiday and
scuba
diving holiday.
voted “Asia’s Best
Championship Course 2005”
and “Best Golf & Spa
Destination 2005” pictured
below, are real highlights in
Phuket’s and southern
Thailand’s golf scene for
golf holiday. Non-golfing
friends also will have a
good time because of
abundant alternative
activities.
Some golf courses border
the seaside offering optical
pleasure a fresh breeze
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maybe some beach golf. Many
of the golf courses offer hotel or resort facilities, and even
quality real estate investments for your next golf holiday home. |


Golf packages Phuket
Thailand golfing holidays |
In terms of international
golf the few golf specials we
show on this page are only a fraction of great golf courses
around the world. To broaden the view a bit more here are
more than hundred other excellent Golf clubs to play your
favored game, read
more |

Golf resorts |
Golf and beach holidays are becoming more and more popular
since what could be more exciting as having a round of golf,
maybe beach golf within golf and beach holidays.
Thailand is the ideal country for this, a relaxed
atmosphere, good food, excellent golf resorts and everything
is still affordable. Just have a close look at the golf
pictures here they tell more than words. |

Golf and beach holidays Thailand |
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- A rather more exotic Golf Holiday
destination is
Myanmar or Burma.

Golf Holiday Bagan Travel |

Golf Holidays Bagan Golf Resort |

exotic golf breaks in Myanmar |

golf specials in Asia |
- Golf
stores and golf resorts are available.
Myanmar is not a golf
galaxy but with the right golf equipment, golf shoes,
golf bags, you can have a good time for a golf game for
almost any golf handicap.
Golf history in Myanmar
shows that since colonial times golf is played in
Myanmar /
Burma. The British established the first golf
club in
Rangoon
in 1909. This is the Yangon Golf Club today, a 18 hole
course with some challenging features. The Asian PGA
tour is a regular tournament here, this to the golf
history subject.
- Great golf gateways: take to the greens at
fine resort destinations from the shores of
Hawaii to the mountains of North Carolina
FOR MOST GOLFERS, HOME courses, like old
clothes, offer a certain comfort. On the road,
however, it's another matter. A bit of
challenge and adventure is expected on new and
unfamiliar ground, be it mountainous or
flat, wetlands or desert, barren or lush.
Something exotic, famous, or strikingly scenic
may be in order on this, a once-a-year--or even
once-in-a-lifetime--opportunity. The cost of
playing--within sanity-is not a major concern.
After all, this is a vacation.
Go to any corner of America today and you
will find a golf course. Close to seven
million Americans a year golf while traveling on
vacation, and just about every destination is
entered in the competition. To help select some
particularly good vacation spots that offer
fabulous golf, here are some venues around the
country:
HAWAII. You can hardly go wrong here, no
matter which isle yon choose to visit. Several
world-class courses have sprouted in recent
years like pineapple and sugar plantations did
decades ago. In fact, some are built on former
plantations as well as on volcanic rock and
mountain hillsides. On the Big Island of
Hawaii, nothing could be finer than a
morning on the Mauna Kea Resort course along the
Kohala Coast, which set the standard when Robert
Trent Jones Sr. designed it 40 years ago. Hapuna,
an adjacent course, came three decades later, a
mountain stronghold of tight fairways, clever
uphill doglegs and hilltop greens. Both are
associated with two beachfront Prince hotels.

Golf Club Walnut Creek, Photo by oiche2
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Maui, Kauai, and Hawaii's other out islands
also offer some of the world's finest golf.
And while it is known more for Pearl Harbor and
Honolulu than golf, the island of Oahu has
several notable courses at reasonable rates (by
Hawaii standards).
The Ko Olina Resort and its
golf club is 40 minutes from Waikiki on west
Oahu, far from the madding crowds. The
exceptional water features and lack of parallel
fairways give it a private ambience, and the
adjacent Marriott Ihilani Resort and Spa is an
oasis of tranquility. But for sheer fun,
magnificent scenery, and the most challenging
round you'll probably ever play, try the Ko'olau
Golf Club on Oahu's windward side. The lush rain
forest and views of the ocean are unforgettable,
although you will want to forget the number of
golf balls you lose.For complete information on golf throughout the
Hawaiian Islands, call (800) GO-HAWAII or visit www.gohawaii.com. |
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ORANGE COUNTY, CA.
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Nowhere in the country will you find more
conspicuous affluence than Orange County,
California, with its luxury hotels, broad,
palm-studded boulevards, fashion malls, and
designer golf courses. But wait. Just because
every other automobile on the road is a $60,000
model, you don't have to be a trust baby to
afford a brief golf vacation here. An
association of six courses, known as "Orange
County: California's
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Golf Coast," has put
together packages involving several resorts and six courses,
all within 40 minutes of each other. |
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The most breathtaking layout is the Ocean
South Course at Pelican Hill in Irvine, a
spectacular Tom Fazio design along the Pacific
Ocean. It's Southern California's answer to
fabled Pebble Beach up north, only more
accessible and a lot cheaper. The stunning
scenery, suberb conditions, and challenging
holes rival any coarse you've ever played.
Two other courses at opposite ends of the cost
meter are Monarch Beach, an ocean resort
course in Dana Point ($150 weekdays), and
Coyote Hills in Fullerton ($46 twilight rate
after 2 p.m.). An interesting component of the
latter, a picturesque and well-kept track in the
affluent suburban hills, is the presence of a
few dozen oil derricks, spread around like so
many dinosaurs dipping into the earth. The land
is owned by an oil company, which wisely leases
it for the golf course. If the derricks come
into play, you probably shouldn't be here.
The other courses in the association are
Strawberry Farms and Oak Creek, both in Irvine,
and Tustin Ranch in Tustin. For complete
information on all the Orange County consortium
courses, associated resorts, and packages, call
(800) 5551982 or visit www.occgolf@cox.net
INLAND GEORGIA More than 40 years ago,
Cason Callaway gave his wife Virginia 5,000
magnolia seedlings for her birthday. They both
loved nature, and their legacy, a 14,000-acre
retreat known as Callaway Gardens in
western Georgia, an hour southwest of Atlanta,
goes far beyond those magnificent, now
fully-grown magnolias. Woodlands full of
hardwoods, gardens bursting with azaleas, and
lakes brimming with fish offer plenty of outdoor
enjoyment in a place where all ages can find
relaxation and a better understanding of the
living world. Not to mention some fabulous golf. |

Beach Golf
Holiday California Pebble each Photo by lexley |
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The kids, totally immersed in discovering the
flora, fauna, and each other, will probably
never notice (or care) that also nestled among
these trees and around these lakes are two
superb 18-hole championship courses. They
are low key compared with the resort's other
attractions, including a Discovery Center,
Butterfly Center, lake beach, and the world's
largest azalea collection, but the links are a
highlight for any golfer, whether or not he or
she stops to smell the flowers. The Lake View
course, with its many water hazards, is a tad
shorter and easier than the Mountain View
layout, with its tree-lined fairways and heavily
bunkered, elevated greens. Just ask the pros who haved played on this course over the past decade
in the PGA Buick Classic.
Meanwhile, the whole family will rest
comfortably after an active day in one of the
resort's 155 two-bedroom Southern Pine
Cottages, all with kitchens, dining areas,
screened porches, decks, and fireplaces. For
rates and reservations, call (800) 225-5292 or
visit www.callawayonline.com. |
COASTAL GEORGIA.
Coastal island golf at attractive rates doesn't
get much better than the Hampton Club on St.
Simons Island, just east of Brunswick,
Georgia. The 18-hole course on the north end of
the island meanders through ancient forests and
across a sea of salt marshes, where four of the
holes on the back nine are located on hammock
islands connected by wooden bridges,
Designed by Joe Lee mad opened in 1989, the
Hampton is now owned by the nearby King and
Prince Beach and Golf Resort, a venerable
landmark that first opened for business in 1935.
The resort has 140 guest rooms, plus 44 two- and
three-bedroom beach villas, and the main hotel
building has been restored with 57 rooms. With
its Mediterranean architecture and dark wood
furnishings, it reflects a regal history,
although today's guests are more likely to be
families seeking beach fun and golfers looking
for a challenging game. The latter is
guaranteed, not only by holes 12 through 15 over
the marshes, but by numerous others where water
threatens.
Brunswick, with its English flavor, was laid out
before the American Revolution and served as a
main port for the area. Today an armada of
shrimp boats based here supplies dozens of local
restaurants that also offer helpings of
Brunswick stew. Ospreys and eagles circle over
the marshes to the east as golfers make their
way along the Hampton Club links.
There are several other coastal courses nearby,
such as Jekyll Island and Sea Island, but
you can't beat the $59 King and Prince Resort
guest rate at the Hampton Club after September
1. The resort also has an indoor pool with a hot
tub, four outdoor pools, sailboat mad kayak
rentals, historical and nature tours, and
fishing charters. For more information, call
(800) 342-0212 or visit www.kingandprince.com.
SOUTH CAROLINA. There are many good golf
destinations ill South Carolina, but Myrtle
Beach overpowers the rest simply by offering
so many options. A golf course building boom
that began in the 1960s has sprinkled the
60-mile coastal corridor known as the Grand
Strand with 120 courses.
In summer, it's a family affair here, with
arcades, beaches, parks, miniature golf, and
countless other amusements. Entertainment is a
la Branson, Missouri, with such venues as Dixie
Stampede, Alabama Theater, Legends in Concert,
and Carolina Opry. In the fall, there are fewer
youngsters and more male golfers, many on
convention trips or traveling in small groups.
As many as 16 different seasonal golf green fee
rates are published, but almost no one comes
here to play without buying some kind of golf
package, which is invariably more economical
than walking on individual courses.
One of the best upscale packages is the
"Island Package" at Pawley's Plantation Golf and
Country Club, which offers four nights
deluxe accommodations ranging from $319 to $594,
depending on season, and four rounds of golf at
Pawley's Island, Heritage, and a choice of True
Blue or Caledonia, all outstanding tracts. Call
Pawley's Plantation Golf and Country Club at
(800) 367-9959 or (877) 763-7341 or visit
www.islandpackage.com.
NORTH CAROLINA. If it's spring, summer,
or fall, you might want to gear your golf escape
to higher elevations. Rhododendron surrounds
several lakeside greens at Linville Golf Club,
located adjacent to and
operated in partnership
with the historic 24-room Eseeola Lodge. Located
on Route 109 in the Blue Ridge Mountains 15
miles south of Boone, both the lodge and the
golf course, a Donald Ross-designed mountain
classic, go back to the 1920s. The course has
been revised over the years, *always with the
view in mind, and both the resort and
championship course are consistently ranked by
golf publications as among the top in the
Carolinas.
The high country surroundings are also classic.
Numerous hiking trails and winding streams criss-cross
the property. There's a heated swimming pool,
tennis courts, croquet, and a children's
playground and day camp. Shopping in the area
for crafts and antiques adds to the diversions.
Best of all, the lodge is only a few miles from
the Blue Ridge Parkway and just down from
Grandfather Mountain, with its great views,
geological exhibits, and Audubon-quality animal
habitats. Hiking trails, a spectacular swinging
bridge, and other family attractions will
entertain everyone for hours.
Spring and fall golf packages at Eseeola
Lodge are $489 to $569 for two nights,
including deluxe accommodations in the lodge,
golf both days, and breakfast and dinner. Call
(800) 742-6717 or visit www.eseeola.com.
FLORIDA. There are well over 1,200 golf
courses in the Sunshine State, but if you want
to hang with the pros and play where they
vacation, you might try the centrally-located
Kolter Resort at PGA Village in Port St.
Lucie. PGA partnered with Kolter, a well-known
international real estate developer, to provide
a championship golf venue for both PGA pros and
guests here. There are three outstanding courses
designed by Tom Fazio and Pete Dye, both noted
for their environmental sensitivity, and playing
golf here is like taking a nature trip amid
Florida flora and fauna ranging from palmettos
mad pines to rolling hills and wetlands.
There's also a golf clubhouse, a golf learning
center, and even a short, six-hole course to
hone up your short game. The resort is
conveniently located between the Palm Beaches
and Treasure Coast near 195, and when everyone
has had their fill of golf, other pursuits in
the area include hitting the beach a few minutes
away and shopping Vero Beach's outlets. The
resort's 250 guest accommodations include
reasonably priced rooms, town-homes, and golf
villas, along with three heated swimming pools
and other amenities. For more information, call
(800) 682-5551 or visit www.kolterresorts.com Travel America, by Jim Kerr
COPYRIGHT World Publishing, Co. (Illinois)
& COPYRIGHT Gale Group
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Georgia favorite - King and Prince Beach &
Golf Resort
A dramatic enhancement was unveiled recently at
The King and Prince Beach & Golf Resort on St.
Simons Island, Georgia. The main building, the
historic core of the resort for 62 years, has
undergone a multimillion-dollar renovation. Its
landmark Mediterranean architecture remains on
the outside, while all guest areas have been
completely transformed on the inside. The
original 70 rooms have been reconfigured into 57
larger rooms with expanded bathrooms. The eight
new Cabana rooms boast parlors, private patios,
and oceanfront location. Four guesthouses add to
the variety of accommodations. Activities range
from golf and cycling to swimming, shelling, and
sailing.
Contact: The King and Prince Beach & Golf
Resort, P.O. Box 20798, St. Simons Island, GA
31522; www.kingandprince.com. |
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