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About Caribbean Golf
The Caribbean offers golf sunny-side up, year-round, with generous helpings of sand, sea and wind. First-
rate golf thrives here, bearing the stamps of noted architects such as Jones, Dye, von Hagge, Nicklaus,
Norman, Weiskopf, Fazio, Hills, Roquemore, Lee and Wilson. And it fits seamlessly into the ultimate beach
vacation lifestyle - luxury resorts, romantic sunsets, great fresh fruits and seafood, and limitless watersports.
Today, you can find good golf on nearly 20 islands that are a short hop from Miami. No two islands are alike,
and neither are the golf courses. The variables? Mountains, volcanoes, rainforests, coral cliffs, sandy
beaches, marshland and even desert-like terrain. The turf is usually Bermuda grass, but finer-bladed, salt-
resistant seashore paspallum is probably the grass of the future on water-poor islands.

"The season in the islands is 12 months long, and there are usually cooling ocean breezes, even in summer.
Language is seldom an obstacle, because English is spoken everywhere. However, the natives converse
among themselves in patois, a local slang which combines several languages and varies from island to island.
This makes it possible for caddies to discuss your swing without your being aware of it, but it's all in good
fun.
You can almost choose a golfing destination by your cultural preferences, and with nearly 50 good courses
waiting, the Caribbean presents a delightful dilemma. Almost without exception, golf courses are couched
in good- to-excellent resorts where you're guaranteed a vacation experience ranging from acceptable to
outstanding. Keep in mind that islanders function on "island time," which means a languid pace in which
punctuality seldom exists.
If you'd like to feel as if you're still in the U.S.A., Puerto Rico is the place. It has more courses than any other
island, and the advantage of being a U.S. territory, which means no currency exchange or immigration
process for U.S. citizens. As in Southern Florida, Spanish is the language of choice.
The island boasts the largest golf complex in the Caribbean, four beautifully maintained Robert Trent Jones
Sr. courses shared by the Hyatt Dorado Beach and Cerromar Beach resorts. There are more than 20 other
courses, including layouts by Rees Jones and Gary Player (Doral Palmas del Mar Resort), Arthur Hills'
Wyndham El Conquistador Resort and Tom and George Fazio's Westin Rio Mar Resort.

Your U.S. dollars are welcome almost everywhere, but in the U.S. Virgin Islands they are the official currency.
The best courses are on St Croix, the classic Robert Trent Jones, Sr.-designed course at the Carambola
Resort, 877-258-2786, (a former Rock Resort in a beautiful cove), and a scenic, above average track at the
Buccaneer Resort (800-255-3881). Former President Clinton frequented St. Thomas' Mahogany Run Course
(800-253-7103), with its infamous "Devils Triangle" along ocean bluffs.
Nevis, a speck of an island southeast of Puerto Rico, was thrust into the forefront of world travel in 1991
when Four Seasons Nevis (869-469-1111) opened as the Caribbean's first five-star resort. The Robert Trent
Jones Jr. course is a roller-coaster ride along the flanks of Nevis Peak, a cloud-capped volcano. In the
aftermath of a hurricane, the resort and the course were closed for massive renovations and reopened last
year. It has resumed its status as one of the most popular luxury resorts in the world.
The tiny Cayman Islands, world-famous for beaches, scuba diving and offshore bank accounts, is a popular
destination for American tourists. Not far from Grand Cayman's resort strip along Seven Mile Beach are two
courses, the water-riddled Links at Safe Haven (345-949-5988), designed by Roy Case; and the Hyatt
Britannia (345-949-8020), Nicklaus' executive course (one of the world's best short courses). To the east of
the Caymans is Jamaica, a jewel of an island with a troubled economy that gets more bad press than it
deserves for crime not related to tourists. The island's resort areas are quite safe and the Jamaican people
are delightful and hospitable. Golf has always been a staple of resort fare here, with classics like the Half
Moon Golf, Tennis and Beach Club (800-626-0592) and the Tryall Club, 800-238-5290, (a former Johnny
Walker venue, recently renovated), but in the past two years, Jamaica has moved well up the list as a
Caribbean golf destination with eight resort courses.

The design team of Robert von Hagge, Rick Baril and Mike Smelek upped the ante with the captivating new
Ritz Carlton Rose Hall White Witch Course (876-518-0174) high above the ocean, and the Three Palms at
Wyndham Rose Hall (876-953-2650), which combines oceanfront and jungle terrain. SuperClubs Resorts'
(800-467-8737) two lowland courses in Runaway Bay and Montego Bay are beautifully conditioned and a
pleasure to play, and the hilly Negril Golf Course (876-957-4638) serves the vital Negril resort area.
East of Jamaica is the island of Hispaniola, shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic, where the official
language is Spanish. The DR is home to 23 courses, and several more are under construction, including a Jack
Nicklaus quartet with a new resort at its center. Chief among the island's bounty is Casa de Campo Resort's
(800-877-3643) Teeth of the Dog, ranked 35th in the world by Golf Magazine. Pete Dye's masterpiece skirts a
jagged, rocky coastline, so close you can feel the salt spray. Inland lies the designer's clever, lake-studded
Links Course, and his third track, which runs along cliffs above the Chavon River, promises to be another
stunner.
The island's newest course is Punta Cana Resort and Club (888-442-2262), where Pete and Alice's son P.B.
Dye created a track pocked with pot bunkers and buttressed with palm logs. It has four holes on the water
and 14 with ocean views. Lying closest to the mainland U.S. is the 700-island chain of the Bahamas, where
island golf dates back to the Roaring 20s, and pioneer designers such as Dick Wilson, Joe Lee and Robert
Trent Jones, Sr. struggled to cover rock with enough dirt to grow grass, using equipment that was no match
for the coral.

Many of the older tracks (there are seven scattered among the islands) are a joy to play because they are on
prime pieces of land and are very natural. But they lack the bells and whistles of modern courses such as the
Robert Trent Jones Jr. Reef Course at the massive new Our Lucaya Resort (877-772-6471) on Grand Bahama Island
(which also has three older courses that have been refurbished). Or the scenic Paradise Island Golf
Course (242-363-6682), recently rebuilt by Tom Weiskopf. Paradise Island is connected by a bridge
to Nassau, capital of New Providence Island, which also has two classic old tracks.
The buzz in the Bahamas is about Emerald Bay Golf Course (561-417-6906), a Greg Norman layout on a
spectacular peninsula on Great Exuma, a sleepy Out Island known for great fishing, diving and sailing.
The course will is the centerpiece of the Four Seasons Resort.
At the tail of the Bahamas archipelago lie the Turks and Caicos, islands known mostly to scuba divers and
beach lovers. Like most of these islands, Providenciales (Provo) has little fresh water, but that did not stop
the Turks and Caicos Water Company from building the Provo Golf Club (649-946-5991) in 1992 as an
investment in the island's future. It is a Karl Litton gem, an oasis in a desert of rock, with a charming
clubhouse and golf packages with a number of fine resorts.
Also considered semi-arid islands are Aruba and Curacao, in the Netherlands Antilles islands off Venezuela.
Aruba is somewhat "Americanized" from heavy tourist traffic, but Curacao has more of a quaint European
atmosphere. The official language is Dutch, but hoteliers and shopkeepers speak English, Dutch and Spanish,
and trade in three currencies. The islands' two cutting edge courses (Robert Trent Jones Jr.'s desert-style
Tierra del Sol (011-297-860-978) on Aruba, and Rocky Roquemore's lush, seaside Blue Bay (011-599-9-868-
1755) on Curacao belong to the same people, who offer a 15-minute helicopter ride between the two
courses.
 Near Venezuela, but to the east of the "ABC Islands" of Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao, lies Trinidad and its
small sister island, Tobago, a bird-watchers' and scuba divers' paradise. Tobago's Mt. Irvine Bay Resort and
Golf Course (868-639-8871) is a former Johnnie Walker Championship venue and one of the top golf resorts
in the region.
Staid, oh-so-British Barbados is north of Tobago and as far east as you can get in the Caribbean. In 1995,
Robert Trent Jones Jr.'s Royal Westmoreland Golf Club (246-422-4653), routed on a spectacular hillside and
through a rock quarry, upstaged the outdated course at the venerable Sandy Lane Resort (246-444-2000).
Sandy Lane reopened last year with an ultra-luxurious new hotel, a revamped Old Nine, the Country Club
Course up in the hills, and the promise of the Green Monkey Course for this year. All are the work of Tom
Fazio, who says the newest addition will be "one of the best courses in the world."
So many islands, so many courses, so little time. "
By Dale Leatherman,
Associate Editor,
Golf Publisher Syndications
For more information about playing golf in the Caribbean, please call us anytime at 1-888-TEE-4ME2
(833-4632) or locally in Washington D.C. at (202) 882-2127.
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