October 2023 was a damp month in England. While many of the leaves were still green, and clinging on, the rain was certainly falling, and that melancholy that appears as the light starts to fade and the temperature drops is a very specific ailment for the golfing species. The parklands and heathlands start to look tired and in need of rest, but we aren\u2019t quite ready to hang up our clubs just yet, for we still remember the times when we couldn\u2019t play at all, bar the carpet putting routine.<\/p>\n
And so we descend on Belfast International Airport – eight of us – in search of a final dose of great golf before autumn takes hold. Four flights from different UK cities arrive within a few minutes of each other, and we are soon en route to the north coast, whose Giant\u2019s Causeway once connected Ireland\u2019s shores to the western flank of Scotland – an ancient connection that makes sense by the time our return flights take off, for the golfing terrain is so similar.<\/p>\n
There is a certain romance to every Open Championship – the world\u2019s best walking in the footsteps of generations of greats that paved the way – but while every year brings drama on the links, 2019 was one of those sporting stories that caught everyone\u2019s attention. The Dunluce Links at Royal Portrush<\/span><\/strong><\/a> had been the scene of Max Faulkner\u2019s sole major championship back in 1951, when his six stroke lead after 54 holes turned into a two stroke victory over Argentina\u2019s Antonio Cerd\u00e1, Perhaps that\u2019s where the flag at Bushmills had come from.<\/p>\n
Soon we are hugging the Donegal coast, having crossed the border into Southern Ireland, for the next destination, Rosapenna Golf & Hotel Resort<\/span><\/strong><\/a>. Golf has been played here through pristine linksland since 1893, but we are here to see the latest superstar of the Irish golf market, St Patrick\u2019s Links. Recently listed at 49 in the Golf Magazine\u2019s new Top 100 Courses in the World<\/span><\/strong><\/a> ranking, the new course was designed and built by Tom Doak\u2019s Renaissance Golf design team.<\/p>\n
Blessed with two 18 hole Championship golf courses and a par 3 links, Ballyliffin Golf Club<\/span><\/strong><\/a> on the Inishowen Peninsula is one of Ireland\u2019s great hidden gems. The Glashedy Links, named after the ancient rock that dominates the seascape off this strip of precious links, was host to the 2018 Irish Open, won by Scotland\u2019s Russell Knox. And next year, it will host The Amateur Championship, with qualifying held on the Old Links beforehand.<\/p>\n
By the time we arrive back near the clubhouse at the 9th, three quarters of our travelling party are too cold and wet, and retreat to the showers to escape the persistent battering from the elements. But two of us, though soaked to the skin already, have seen enough of Ballyliffin to be in love with it, and so we whip round the back nine in under an hour, all the time with one eye on the warm-looking respite of the 19th hole.<\/p>\n
From the tenth, the course seems to build on the strong foundations going out, and as we approach towards the southerly end of the property, hole after hole blows us away. We pass through rumpled fairways to arrive at the tough par 3 twelfth, from where the thirteenth draws us into the far corner of Ballyliffin\u2019s majestic canvas, before a staggering long hole hugs the coast as it travels towards a unique green complex, guarded on the left by a grassy knoll, on the right by a deep, mown abyss.<\/p>\n
On the sixteenth, we narrowly avoid a bunker reminiscent of the greenside one at the Road Hole, and enjoy a short penultimate hole before the par five eighteenth delivers us safely back to the clubhouse. Before long, we are in the bar, nursing hot soup with the local ramblers, and watching the weather front move across this panoramic landscape before us.<\/p>\n
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To descend on a club fresh from the world-famous marvels of Royal Portrush and St Patrick\u2019s Links seems unfair in a way; a billing that few could live up to. But despite the wind and the rain, despite the fatigue in our legs and the drenched clothing that we press into our luggage – despite all that, Ballyliffin Old is still a delight, and we leave vowing to come back on a drier day, and sample the Glashedy next time, too.<\/p>\n
For there is something in Ballyliffin\u2019s DNA that screams simplicity – in design, in the fine presentation, in the bunkering and in the simple, charming service of its staff that seems to sum up golfing in Ireland as well as either of the other courses we\u2019ve been lucky enough to play.<\/a> This place is a roller-coaster ride in the shadow of the nearby mountains, and should be on every purist\u2019s wishlist.<\/p>\n
Find out more about the wealth of golfing finery in Ireland via Tourism Ireland\u2019s golf portal, here: www.ireland.com\/golf<\/span><\/strong><\/a><\/em><\/p>\n
Read more about Royal Portrush and St Patrick\u2019s Links via Richard Pennell\u2019s pitchmarks blog, here<\/span><\/strong><\/a> and here<\/span><\/strong><\/a> respectively.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"