Golf and Travel

 

Now For Something Completely Different - The Tennessee Golf Trail

The Clubhouse at Harrison Bay, TN, in the Fall

The Tennessee Golf Trail consists of nine golf courses located across the state from Warrior's Path, Kingsport, in the east to?Pickwick Landing in the west. The Tennessee Golf Trail includes three of the original Bear Trace, Jack Nicklaus Signature courses, plus six more so-called "traditional" golf courses; all nine golf courses are located in Tennessee State Parks, and that means that all nine can be played for less than $60, even on weekends (most can be played for $35 Monday through Friday); and that also includes the two Bear Trace courses that are not a part of the Trail. Ok, so here we have nine amazing golf courses that represent at least a week's golf vacation, 10 days if you're so inclined. Would you like to more? Of course you would, so please check my refiew of the Tennessee Golf Trail/Bear Trace, Tennessee's answer to the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail in Alabama.

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TPC Myrtle Beach

Clubhouse at TPC Myrtle Beach South Carolina

The 18-hole TPC Myrtle Beach championship course plays a little shorter than most of its TPC peers, just 6,950 yards from the championship tees. Not quite the toughie we've come to expect from master designer Tom Fazio; It's also much flatter than the typical Fazio layout, but with towering old-growth pines, vast tracts of natural wetlands, and water in play on 10 of 18 holes, it's not a boring layout. So, the TPC of Myrtle Beach is well worth a visit.Please read my full review.

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Arnie Golf and Lifestyle Apparel Line

Arnie Golf and Lifestyle Apparel LineRetailing from $79 and up, Arnie Golf and Lifestyle Apparel is offering three distinct collections; all would make great gifts for Father's day: the?1950s Collection, ?the?1960s Collection and the?970s Collection (available in July). If you're looking for something different for Dad, well there's probably nothing he'd like better than a new shirt or pair of pants from this decidedly unique line of clothing; it's special, and it's brand new. For more information: styles, items, prices and ordering infor, please read my full review of the Arnie Golf and Lifestyle Apparel collections.

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The Golf Courses and Resorts in Mesquite, Nevada

The Chase Golf Club at PGA Village in Coyote Springs, NevadaOk, so we all agree that Mesquite, Nevada, is not one of the best known golf destinations in the world, or even in the United States, but that's about to change. I am one of desert golf's greatest fans. And golf in Mesquite is certainly that. And there are some really nice, challenging golf courses to play, and several world-class resorts to stay at. Would you like to know more? While it's still in the growth stage, you can check out my new listings to get a feel for the Golf Courses and Resorts in Mesquite, Nevada.

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Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort, Destin, Florida - Father’s Day Unlimited Golf Getaway

Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort, Destin, Florida

This Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort, Destin, Florida - Father's Day Unlimited Golf Getaway starts at just $199 per person.?The package on offer?at one of Florida's Top 10 golf resorts, ?on Northwest Florida's Emerald Coast features:

  • One round at each on the Raven course (RTJ II-layout and host of two PGA Champions Tour events) and the Burnt Pine layout (Rees Jones-design and private club where resort guests receive access) Golf Clubs with the option of booking additional complimentary rounds (based on availability)
  • A dozen personalized Titleist golf balls for the dads
  • Use of golf carts
  • Access to Sandestin's practice facility and driving range
  • Accommodations in one of Sandestin's 1,300 condos, villas, town homes, or the resort's hotel

Details: The package is valid June 8 - July 31 and must be booked by June 17. Rates for all packages are based on a two-night stay and do not include fees and taxes. Guests must mention the promo code "DAD" when booking. To learn more about the Sandestin Resort, please read my review. For more package information you can visit the Sandestin website or call (888) 801-4388.

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Tips to Combat Slow Play

Slow play on the golf course is usually a habit that a golfer acquires over time, as he or she acquires bad habits. Or it's the result of the golfer never having been taught proper golf etiquette. This means a slow golfer can usually be "cured" of his malady. Of course, that golfer has to be aware that he's slow, and that's where buddies come into play.

But as we often take a look at other golfers on the course and notice the things they do to slow down play, so should we take a look at ourselves. When we do take an honest look at ourselves, we often discover we're doing some of the same things to slow down play that we're complaining about others doing.

Before we run down a list of suggestions for speeding up play, it's important to note that many of these tips have nothing to do with rushing your play, but rather with simply being ready to play, and with using common sense and good etiquette on the course.

The bottom line is, as soon as it's your turn to play, you should be ready to step right up and make the stroke.

Here are some tips for speeding up slow play on the golf course:

‧ Choose the correct set of tees from which to play. If you're a 20-handicapper, you have no business playing the championship tees. Doing so only adds strokes, which add time.

‧ Members of a group should not travel as a pack, with all members walking together to the first ball, then the second, and so on. Each member of the group should walk directly to his own ball.

‧ When two players are riding in a cart, drive the cart to the first ball and drop off the first player with his choice of clubs. The second player should proceed in the cart to his ball. After the first player hits his stroke, he should begin walking toward the cart as the second golfer is playing.

‧ Use the time you spend getting to your ball to think about the next shot - the yardage, the club selection. When you reach your ball you'll need less time to figure out the shot.

‧ If you are unsure whether your ball has come to rest out of bounds, or may be lost, immediately hit a provisional ball so that you won't have to return to the spot to replay the shot. If you are playing a recreational match with, shall we say, a "loose interpretation" of the rules, then simply drop a new ball somewhere around the area where your ball was lost and keep playing (taking a penalty, of course).

‧ If you're following the rules, you won't be using mulligans. But if are using mulligans, limit them to no more than one mulligan per nine (you should never hit a mulligan if players behind you are waiting - or if you want to later claim that you played by the rules).

‧ Begin reading the green and lining up putts as soon as you reach the green. Don't wait until it's your turn to putt to start the process of reading the green. Do it as soon as you reach the green so that when it's your turn you can step right up and putt.

‧ Never delay making a stroke because you're having a conversation with a playing partner. Put the conversation on hold, make your stroke, then pick up the conversation again.

‧ If using a cart on a cart-path-only day, take more than one club with you when you walk from the cart to your ball. Getting to the ball only to find out you don't have the right club is a huge time-waster on the golf course.

Next Page: 15 More Tips for Fighting Slow Play


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Does PGA Tour Need to Crack Down On Slow Play?

Should the PGA Tour crack down on slow play? Kevin Na's glacial pace at The Players Championship has set a lot of tongues wagging on the issue. Of course, Na has been a very slow player for years, as have quite a few other tour members.

The tour has slow play rules in place already that would probably speed up play if they were simply enforced - because enforcing them would lead to penalty strokes. As it stands, the PGA Tour hasn't assessed a penalty stroke to a player because of slow play in 20 years.

Is an individual golfer's pace of play even the main issue in overlong rounds? In comments made prior to The Players Championship, PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem said no. Finchem said the issue is one of logistics: With 150-plus player fields, there are inevitable bottleneck areas on every golf course where play is going to back up.

We see that on the courses we play on busy days. Those par-5s where players wait to have a go at the green in two. On particularly busy days, just about any par-3. Those are places where recreational golfers on the local course will have to wait on a busy day, and they are places where the pros in a large field are going to wait, too. Finchem claimed that reducing field size to, say, 120 players, would solve the issue. But we all know there's zero chance of that happening (and Finchem wasn't proposing it, merely claiming field size and course logistics play a larger role in long tour rounds than the pace of individual golfers). But we've also all seen very long rounds in short-field pro tournaments, and "bottlenecking" can't explain 6-hour matches at the Ryder Cup.

In my opinion, absolutely nothing will be done about slow play on the PGA Tour until or unless one thing happens: until or unless the television networks state, or the tour comes to believe, that PGA Tour telecasts will be worth less money unless pace of play improves. Otherwise, there are too many players - probably a majority - who think, "I'm playing for millions of dollars, I'll take as long on a shot as I need."

Unless it starts to hit players and the tour in the pocketbook, slow play in tour events will be around forever. And so will complaining about slow play in tour events.

See also:
PGA Tour slow play policy
How recreational golfers can avoid slow play


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