Destination Golf Scotland 2018 * | Page 10

The World famous Jigger Inn next to the 17th of the Old Course. A gallery of old golf photos adorn the wall at Pilmour Hotel. Golfers drink under the eye of Old Tom Morris. In one of the cosy booths we get chatting with David Williams, Hugh Grant’s caddie at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship a few years ago. “He’s a nice bloke, just how he appears in the movies, and not a bad golfer either,” he tells us, as we enjoy our pints watched over by an impressive black-and -white photograph of Old Tom Morris. We ask David about the 19th hole and what it means to him. “Every golfer understands the tradition and importance of the 19th hole, it’s all about fellowship and camaraderie. After your round you go there to socialise with friends, perhaps celebrate your best ever round, or more likely drown your sorrows after a poor one,” he says. “Golf is a common language and it’s easy to chat to the people at the next table about the course you played that day or team up with new golfing friends for a round the next. It just snowballs from there and before you know it everyone is talking to each other.” St Andrews has several other golfer-friendly taverns including the Scorecards Bar (near the Old Course’s 18th green), where the walls are lined with scorecards from the British Open and Dunhill Cup Championship including some historic final rounds. There’s also the Pilmour Hotel (just up the road from the Dunvegan), Whey Pat Tavern and Ma Bells (inside the St Andrews 8 Golfers passing by Scores Hotel. Golf Hotel), a regular hangout for Prince William during his university days. But the 19th hole just wouldn’t be the same without playing the eighteen holes before it, and St Andrews is known as the Home of Golf for good reason. Not only is this game’s hallowed birthplace – ‘On May 14 1754, twenty-two” Gentlemen of honour, skillful in the ancient and healthy exercise of Golf,” founded the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St.Andrews,’ but today’s golfers have a choice of around 20 courses to play within a short drive of town. Although the venerated Old Course is the best known here’s six others to test your game… Kingsbarns: Designed by leading golf architect Kyle Phillips, Kingsbarns (used as one of the venues for the Dunhill Links Championship) is a tribute to classic Scottish links and has come on in leaps and bounds since opening in 2000. The course meanders along more than one-and-a-half miles of rugged seashore offering ocean views from every hole. Featuring spacious fairways rolling and twisting through dune ridges and hollows, true links turf and large greens, the course is challenging yet playable. www.kingsbarns.com Castle Course: Opened in June 2008, the Castle Course has been internationally recognised as one of the top