Do I put something about video in here?
Most overseas visitors taking Scotland’s Open Championship Venues Golf Vacation are likely to be very focused on the playing rather than tourist activity, but there is some scope for the latter.
With five clear courses to include however, this is something of a point to tour tour.
To a large extent the framework is dictated to us though. In order to give ourselves the best chance of including the St Andrews Old Course we need to put at least Thursday to Saturday on-side. Since they only offer visitors two days a week, this pushes Muirfield onto a Tuesday. The next restricted playing window is Royal Troon. We’ve used up their Tuesday and Thursday, so will be forced onto the only visitor day left, Monday. We then have to build the rest of the courses around this structure, whilst trying to maximise our exposure to the St Andrews area
Scotland’s Open Championship Venues Golf Vacation is laid out as a nine night duration staying:
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Carnoustie is notably less expensive than St Andrews, but has nothing like the charisma. We save money staying there.
At about 475 miles, Scotland’s Open Championship Venues Golf Vacation is a medium mileage intensity transport burden.
In total, this should require about 13 hrs of road time, which is an average of about 1 hr 25 mins a day
We could clip 2 hrs off this if stayed Saturday night at Carnoustie rather than running back to St Andrews after we’ve played Panmure
With all the moving parts associated with the Old Course ballot, plus the fact we’ll be moving across regions, we wouldn’t recommend the use of a hired driver for this trip, but if you insisted, then it could be done. It would cost notably more to do so however
Scotland’s Open Championship Venues Golf Vacation can support Luxury, Premier and Affordable options
If we wanted to save a little bit of money, we could spend the Sunday night at Carnoustie instead of St Andrews
As ever, the scale of non-golf activity depends on whether we’re adding extra value for golfers, or building a stand alone proposal for non-golfers to run alongside a golf programme. The combinations are quite good
Scotland’s Open Championship Venues Golf Vacation is more likely to appeal to golfers than non-golfers, but that isn’t to say any accompanying non-golfers would be lost
The west coast leg wouldn’t leave the non-golfers too much to do outside of Culzean Castle (Turnberry) or a train to Glasgow (Prestwick)
Edinburgh is a good partner for Muirfield however
St Andrews is a legitimate point of interest without golf. The ruined old castle and cathedral are natural focus points, whereas the town also possesses aesthetic charisma and history.
The East Neuk of Fife has a collection of charming fishing villages we can wander around at leisure on a gentle afternoon combined with Kingsbarns
Finally, Glamis Castle combines well with Carnoustie
A number of these courses operate handicap thresholds
Royal Troon might be the lowest, but they’ll normally turn a blind eye if we’re a few shots wrong (provided we tell them and are honest about it)
Unlike some courses who needn’t be rigid in enforcing their handicap thresholds, Muirfield and the St Andrews Links Trust will do. Failure to provide evidence will result in a refusal to allow us to play
The Old Course diary is available on-line to consult for availability and is dynamic in so much as it changes every season, although there are some known block outs that occur every year, notably the first week of May, the first week of June, and a run from early/ mid September to early/ mid October
There is no play on the Old Course on Sunday
Muirfield only permit visitor play on Tues and Thurs, and only then as fourballs, up to a maximum of twelve per application. If you apply as anything other than a fourball, you’ll be rejected
Muirfield release their tee-times for play the following season in February. They are the first course to move and we need to be about 18 months ahead of the curve to succeed there
Tee-times are allocated by a lottery, albeit your chances of success are better if you go through a golf tour operator (GTO). Be aware however, GTO’s are limited to 20 nominated golfers per season, so in reality you probably need to get someone to support your application around Nov/ Dec of the year before that. Duplicate entries will lead to you being disqualified
Troon only permits visitor play on Mon, Tues & Thurs.
Prestwick doesn’t permit visitor play on Sat or Sun morning
Turnberry will allow visitors to play afternoon tee-times, but require that we pay a prohibitively very expensive green fee for a morning tee-time, unless we’re a hotel guest in which case we’d pay the residents rate
Carnoustie whilst usually being open 7 days of the week, visitors will have to play afternoon tee-times at the weekend
With all the usual disclaimers of a lottery being random, and there being no such thing as a certainty etc plus the variable factor of availability for the specific week chosen, our prospects of winning a ballot for Scotland’s Open Championship Venues Golf Vacation would otherwise be considered gently favourable if we sought to use every opportunity to do so
We won’t contest a ballot on Tuesday against the shadow of Muirfield (we’d never get Muirfield rearranged) and in many respects Muirfield is an equally sought after and prestigious round than St Andrews anyway
We should be able to contest a total of four open ballots (Weds to Sat) although we might choose not to risk North Berwick? In addition to these, we should be able to contest at least two ‘singles’ ballot (Fri & Sat), for a total of seven. If we can get an early time at North Berwick on Weds, then we would be able to get to St Andrews before 16.45 and enter the singles ballot for play on Thurs for extra shot at the Old Course, but more often than not however, we probably won’t be land this (we’d need to hit the 10.00 to 10.30 window at North Berwick)
If we were prepared to fly to Scotland a day early to settle in (Friday), and turn this into a ten night duration, then we’d open up a second full ballot application to the prime day of the week (Saturday). Admittedly this would put us into a clash with Turnberry, which we’d look to host on Sunday now, and probably drop Prestwick
Green fees need paying in advance and are always non-refundable against a certain timeline
Green fees need paying in advance and are always non-refundable against a certain timeline
A St Andrews Old Course ballot is drawn 48 hrs before play, and we can safely assume that this is outside any refund window! Any win in the ballot therefore will send us into a clash with which ever course we had booked that day, and we’ll a loss of the green fee unless we can get the tee-time rearranged. For this reason we don’t necessarily want to fill every day of the week up with a paid green fee and golf course. That would be designing a forfeit (we are after all setting up to win a ballot and play the Old Course)
Luckily the St Andrews New Course can’t be prebooked, and every other tee-time after 09.00 is offered present-pay-and-play-on-the-day. This is a great way of putting a placeholder into the itinerary without taking on the liability of a prepaid green fee
We try to schedule the New Course in any St Andrews swing to max out this position. If we win a ballot on the day we were going to try and play the New Course, we simply play the Old Course instead. If we win a ballot on another day, then we look to reschedule the affected course onto the day we had the New Course inked in and avoid a forfeit that way. We’ll usually try and put the New Course last in an itinerary then to give ourselves the maximum length of runway onto which we might land the rearranged round
Perversely perhaps, we’re actually hoping not to play the New Course. The reason we wouldn’t play it, is because we’ve won a ballot and are playing the Old Course instead
We perhaps don’t want to make too much of this, but the Musselburgh Old Course hosted the Open Championship a total of six times, last doing so in 1889.
If this claim to fame is surprising, it get’s better. It’s actually recognised by Guinness as the, oldest golf course in the world! So why have you barely heard of it?
Well the answer to that is because what’s left of it is an unremarkable, flat, nine holes playing on the infield of Musselburgh racecourse.
If you were to stand there, and someone pointed at it and told you it was an Open Championship venue and the oldest course in the world, you’d frankly laugh in disbelief
However, Musselburgh is about 25 mins from Muirfield, and a round costs about £30. If times permits, and curiosity gets the better of us, we could probably play it ‘on the fly’