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Co. Down, Royal Portrush | Portmarnock
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The K Club | Rosses
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Lahinch | Galway
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of Kerry | Waterville
Tralee | Killarney
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Island | Mt.
Juliet | Adare
Manor & GC
Galway
Bay Golf & Country Club
Rifling
3-irons on the practice tee while preparing for
the 1999 Senior PGA Tour event in Columbia, MD,
eventual winner Christy O'Connor Jr. talked about
Galway Bay, the course he designed in Galway. "I'm
really proud of that one," says the nephew
of Irishman golf legend Christy O'Connor Sr. and
the architect of over a dozen courses on the Emerald
Isle. "It's one of my favorites and you'll
love it."
 |
|
Galway
Bay Golf & Country Club Hotel
|
The
Irishman's enthusiasm was understandable. O'Connor
is a principal partner in the Galway Bay Golf &
Country Club Hotel, of which the course is the centerpiece.
While eye-catching views of beautiful Galway Bay
and Galway City are everywhere evident on it, the
golf course does not justify the highest acclaim.
Yet, it is a good course and, if you stay at the
comfortable 92-room hotel directly adjacent to it,
you couldn't choose a better base to see the city
and its surrounds.
The
golf club and hotel are situated directly on the
Bay's southern coastline
just outside the quaint village of Oranmore about
20 minutes south of Galway City. Erstwhile agricultural
land, the property lies adjacent Renville Park,
a scenic wooded park with open fields where couples
young and old take Sunday stroll and picnic and
teenagers walk their dogs and toss frisbees. Among
the wildlife are fox and deer.
With
its commanding view of the Bay, the land caught
the eye of O'Connor, who had lofty plans for the
project. The course opened in 1993 and the hotel
opened in 1997. The project also includes small
family condo-style units situated along the first
fairway.
Galway
Bay, whose pro is O'Connor's brother Eugene, hosted
the '99 West of Ireland Open, a European PGA Tour
event won by Constantino Rocca. It is definitely
a major championship test from the back tees where
it measures over 7000 yards. Yet, from the forward
tees casual golfers will find it enjoyable and not
overly taxing from a physical standpoint.
Galway
Bay is a "parkland-by-the-sea" style layout
punctuated here and there with a few Hawthorne trees
and wild bushes including white thorn, furz, hazel
and sedge. Otherwise, it is quite open and therefore
susceptible to the winds. Small remnants of ancient
ruins are visible at various points on the course
and adjacent the 13th tee box is the site of an
ancient copper mine that predates the 16th Century.
According to the brochure, a mystical fairy fort
lies underground between the 2nd and 10th greens.
For
all its putative mystical roots, Galway Bay is a
pretty straightforward layout with a strong American
design influence. In keeping with O'Connor's desire
to create a good but fair test, the landing areas
are wide and the middle-sized greens, built to USGA
specs, are not overly tricky. Created mounds and
lakes are a dead giveaway that this is not a course
that was laid down on the earth just as it was found.
According to the course superintendent, "The
design of this course was aimed at the American
market. Everything is cut, including the rough and
natural areas, whereas on most courses over here
those areas are left alone."
Situated
only a minute's walk from the golf clubhouse that
includes an informal grille, the hotel overlooks
the course and bay beyond. It is a somewhat spare
hotel featuring comfortable, if not elegant, rooms;
a two-room dining area; a pub; and a large reception
area with a fireplace.

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