willabur wrote: » would be all over that - Quick 12 holes in corballis to tune up and then into the island for the afternoon. 85 quid is a great price
Exactly wrote: » Apparently The Island are going to start running an Open Singles on Friday afternoons in the near future. Have heard €85 mentioned as the Visitor rate so I'm not sure people would be playing it too often but might be nice once in a while.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Apparently The Island are going to start running an Open Singles on Friday afternoons in the near future. Have heard €85 mentioned as the Visitor rate so I'm not sure people would be playing it too often but might be nice once in a while.
Miley Byrne wrote: » Would golf balls not be considered rubbish?
FixdePitchmark wrote: » My wife has been fairly distressed at the level of plastic and rubbish around the place. It is shocking when you actually look. She has taken to picking it up - fair play - but she has a big big endless sea of work to go. I sat on a rock mid way with my 9 iron walking stick, down 3 of my 4 balls - looked at the unusual sky that can happen at half light over the Poolbeg Peninsula. Ships slowly approaching. Dublin what a city, we can love and hate all in the same day. I then considered if my wife would find the 3 balls I lost [/I]
FixdePitchmark wrote: » Tread softly
rickis tache wrote: » Would you not of played Achill? That was the most strange course I ever played. Due to the flatness and the difficulty of gauging distances. Very enjoyable though.
etxp wrote: » I would be off the same thinking as you but I haven't played Rosses yet. the flattest links that i would have played is either Connemara or Strandhill, but I would be choosing Carne or Enniscrone over either of them. Old head is pretty flat but i wouldn't class that as a links. Hopefully knock a few of the "flat" links off the list this year. They will need to be pretty special to change my mind.
FixdePitchmark wrote: » I think this is a really interesting post -and I've found it to be true. Even against my own personal preference for the more dramatic deeper sand dune courses. The likes of Portmarnock / Royal Dublin / Rosses Point / Baltray. You could play them courses for years and the various intricacies would only be revealed with time. Sadly you do not get to play them enough. I've a particular personal preference for the deeper , dramatic courses , with great sea views. I even love blind and part blind holes and the more eccentric holes. These are more prevalent on the courses with more dramatic profiles. I also love holes with elevation changes and have a particular weakness for elevated tee shots. For that reason - I would be drifting towards the likes of Enniscrone over Rosses.
thewobbler wrote: » All of the larger dune courses enjoy an impact / first impression that can’t really be matched by a course without that definition. Dead people would gain a pulse if waked on the first tee at Portstewart. But I’d think that on repeated play the subtleties of the lower-lying links allow them to gain superiority. That underlying sense that there’s a cardwrecker at every turn on high dunes plays against it in the long run.
Luckycharm wrote: » I played both last year and we all much preferred Enniscrone so many memorable only only remember a few on Rosses.
plumber77 wrote: » I would agree totally. Love both but Rosses Point is just a class above Enniscrone as a golf course.
carq wrote: » looks like the burren from aerial view on google maps! not sure how you could put a golf course on it
willabur wrote: » Speaking of Island golf. Another plan to build a new golf course in ireland that didn't make it past the ladies tee boxhttps://www.independent.ie/sport/golf/inishmore-bucks-trend-with-plans-for-world-class-links-26788136.html anyone familiar with that part of the island would know it would make a really nice golf course although it would be very short. Islanders were happy to have the course there as golfers leave more money behind that day trippers
willabur wrote: » Enniscrone is amazing but it is let down by the 4 or 5 holes that are not in the dunes. Really not much going on there.
Arnold54321 wrote: » Far superior course... we’ll have to agree to disagree on this one ;-) It’s a little while since I played Enniscrone and it’s certainly a splendid track although not quite on the same scale as Rosses Point IMO. I feel there isn’t a poor/bland hole at Rosses and they regularly upgrade parts of the course. It’s much more playable with no trickery. Funnily enough my favourite hole is the 10th, probably because of the views, and least being the 17th which is many people’s favourite.
gypsy79 wrote: » It is very different to Enniscrone. The scenery is much more beautiful but I would have Enniscrone as the far superior golf course