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Royal
Co. Down, Royal Portrush | Portmarnock
| Royal Dublin
| Druids Glen
The K Club | Rosses
Point, Enniscrone, Carne | Connemara
| Ballybunion
Lahinch | Galway
Bay G&CC | Dooks,
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of Kerry | Waterville
Tralee | Killarney
| Old Head | Fota
Island | Mt.
Juliet | Adare
Manor & GC
Druids Glen
Golf Club
Mark
this American style parkland course down; it is
absolutely magnificent.
Druids
Glen Golf Club lies in County Wicklow 20 miles south
of Dublin in the tiny village of Newtown Mt. Kennedy.
It is less than one mile from the Irish Sea and
within shouting distance of the towering Wicklow
Mountains.
It
is appropriate that Druids Glen is in County Wicklow.
The county is known as The Garden of Ireland. Consider
Druids Glen the Tuilleries of Irish Golf. It is
as breathtaking visually as any parkland course
you will play, a course that has been landscaped
so lavishly and beautifully you will constantly
be turning your head as you negotiate some wonderfully
designed holes, such as the 8th hole above.
The
name, Druids Glen, originates from the Druids altar,
a preserved stone located on a hillside to the right
of the magnificent par 3 12th hole (below). The
Druids
were pagan priests who were alleged to have repelled
Welsh missionary Patrick's attempts to convert them
to Christianity. As a result, Patrick was forced
to move his Irish base of operations to Drogheda.
He later became Ireland's patron saint. On the grass
bank directly below the tee box at #12 is the Druidical
symbol of the circle overlain by the Christian Cross.
The
majestic clubhouse is the former manor house, called
Woodstock House, which was built in 1760 by an Irish
earl. Later, a local bishop took over and enlarged
the house. Restored to its original architectural
elegance, the clubhouse now includes an exquisitely
appointed small dining room overlooking the 18th
green. The course is laid out over the original
estate that features ponds, high banks planted with
trees and shrubs, a walled garden, and low lying
areas where streams meander over rocks. The course
of bent grass greens is impeccably landscaped with
all kinds of trees, shrubs and flowering plants.
Opened
in 1995 and host to the last three Irish Opens,
the course was designed by Pat Ruddy and Tom Craddock,
veteran Irish designers who were heavily influenced
by both St. Andrews (the par 3 2nd in the walled
garden mimics #17 of the Old Course) and Augusta
National (the 12th and adjacent par 3 8th, both
of which lie in the glen).
Colin
Montgomerie is among a group of players who have
privately criticized the course for its unfairness,
and it is true several holes could be improved.
However, the course couldn't be too unfair. Sergio
Garcia blistered it in the 1999 Open (just a week
after I was there). The 19-year-old Spaniard, in
only his sixth tournament as a professional and
fourth on the PGA European Tour, shot a 16 under
that included a final round 64.
Overall,
the design makes masterful use of the natural contours
and elevation changes. For example, the 461 yard
(from the whites) 120 degree dogleg right 13th (below)
is THE best parkland par 4 that I have ever seen.
The tee box is enclosed in woods and sits high above
a stream that zigzags the entire length of the hole,
emptying into a pond that guards the green left
and features a tiny island, allegedly used by the
Earl's family as a place to swim and sunbath. From
the high tee box, the fairway looks impossibly narrow.
It is tightly framed by high mounds on both sides
that are thickly planted with trees and plants.
In addition, on the right side 200 yards out is
a granite outcropping 60 feet high that looks like
a miniature El Capitain. This natural framing gives
the hole a valley-like feel. It's as if you are
golfing
in
a miniature Khyber Pass. Once you've cleared the
crossing stream some 40 yards in front of the green
with your very long approach shot, you cross over
a stone bridge reminiscent of the bridge at the
18th at St. Andrews.
In
several years, Druids Glen will expand to include
a medium sized hotel and second golf course to be
designed by Tom Craddock. Like the existing course,
it will feature panoramic views of the sea and the
spectacular Wicklow Mountains including Sugarloaf
Mt., a towering conically shaped mountain to the
northwest.
To reserve tee times, call + 353 404 287 3600 (From
the U.S., enter 011 in place of +).

Return
to Ireland Intro
Royal
Co. Down, Royal Portrush
| Portmarnock
| Royal
Dublin | Druids
Glen
The
K Club | Rosses
Point, Enniscrone, Carne |
Connemara
| Ballybunion
Lahinch | Galway
Bay G&CC | Dooks,
Dingle | Ring
of Kerry | Waterville
Tralee
| Killarney
| Old
Head | Fota
Island | Mt.
Juliet | Adare
Manor & GC