Destination Golf Ireland 2016 | Page 150

Belvoir Park Clandeboye (Dufferin) Thirteen miles east of Belfast, on the outskirts of Newtownards, lies one of Northern Ireland’s top golf clubs. There are two very different courses here and the Dufferin is the main event. It is a quality course routed over heathland-like bumpy terrain at the top before slipping down into more classic parkland mode. This is where the big trees dominate and holes curve graciously between them. Fairways are often generous but the trees need to be avoided constantly. It is not long so be straight. The par four 4th is Dufferin’s best and hardest hole, curling left, tightly through the trees. The green is completely surrounded by trees and gorse, so a precise approach is required. The second course, the Ava, is short, quirky and has lots of spirit. Belvoir Park The design pedigree of Belvoir Park speaks for itself. Harry Colt created this timeless parkland in the late 1920s. Even back then, Colt was revered, and over the following decades the club embraced his work and changed little. Tucked away in 21st century Belfast suburbia, it means you can step back in time and experience a classic. Your starting point should be the clubhouse balcony. It sits high above the back nine and shows off the colourful setting below and the distant Belfast Hills. This is a sedate, flowing course and one that enjoys tremendous rhythm thanks to Colt’s layout… but the pace is enhanced by the magnificent and dense trees that enshroud the course. Expect lightning fast, perfect and heavily bunkered greens. 148 Ardglass With two sides embraced by ocean, with Van Morrison’s Coney Island a backdrop to a stunning par three and with canons behind the 1st tee, Ardglass sets temperatures soaring right from the word go. The thrilling opening holes cling to the cliff tops with no quarter given. Shots into turret-like greens (the 1st) and the chasm-crossing par three 2nd set the tone. It feels utterly wild to be up here. Ardglass combines cliff-top, links and seaside holes to create a heady golfing mix and a round heavily influenced by wind. The three links holes by the sea arrive almost with a crashing of cymbals, such is their impact. Two par threes and an inspiring par five squeezed between dune and ocean. And don’t ignore the 18th leading back to the centuries-old clubhouse, built on the ruins of a 13th century castle. Royal County Down (Annesley) The Annesley rarely receives the credit it deserves. Perhaps that is due to its modest par of 66… but this sensational 66 will make a fool of you if you think it is easy. It uses much of the same terrain as its championship sibling (they intertwine), just with shorter holes. Indeed, some green settings are even tighter and, while the bunkering is less prevalent, the gorse gets far more friendly. The longest par four is 349 yards so this is about laser-like accuracy… and the good grace to accept that such tight fairway