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Brora
Golf Club was established in 1891 and the Club recently celebrated
it's Centenary. In 1923 James Braid, five times Open Champion
and a prolific designer of golf courses, the most famous of which
is Gleneagles, visited the course and redesigned the 18 hole layout
which has stood the passing of time and remains a fair and challenging
test of true links golf.
Brora presents all the attributes of the Scottish seaside links,
there is bent and gorse - often in full bloom for Golf Week -
Juniper and Thyme in profusion. The layout is classic: an easy
opening hole, a short hole facing each cardinal point of the compass,
a hole you can't reach in two shots (at least not till there has
been tuition from Brian Anderson) and the last green under the
clubhouse window.
The course will
ensure that you use every club in the bag, and that you will have
to adapt and manufacture according to whether the course is running
fast or slow. The greens are renowned for their texture. The ball
runs true on the seaside fescue. While pin placements are generous
there are lovely swingy borrows on virtually every green.
The sand is local and light, aiding recovery, the bunkers strategic
but fair. As with all seaside links there are special places,
the panorama of seascape and landscape from the second tee, the
proximity of the sea to the 9th green, should there be time to
bathe your feet. The 13th, is one of the jewels in Braid's crown.
Tarbatness, the 17th, so called because of the lighthouse which
gives the line. With the elevated tee, this is one of the best
driving holes in all Scotland.
The rough is negligible in order to facilitate play, you ought
to return home with all the golf balls you brought! Over all the
golf course is a holiday treat, the clubhouse modern and comfortable,
the catering excellent. But perhaps the most over-riding, all
important feature is the atmosphere - warm, friendly and welcoming.
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