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Village Squire, 1976-02, Page 21Travel It's the time of year when the golf fanatics rush south to rush spring. BY TED PARKS Relegate the skis to the attic, unearth the golf clubs, re -polish the irons and grip the driver. Feeling good?_ Keep your head down, your eyes on the ball. FORE! Swing now towards spring when the snows have melted and the frost has gone, leaving the home greens and fairways ready for play. For the necessary pre -season practice, go south and join what, at last count, were close to 12 million players in the United States enjoying the golf boom there. Investors pumped more than S350 million into new courses last year despite the recession, and in the three years before that 700 regulation layouts and 75 shorter ones were built. Together, the U.S. can now count a total of 12,300 courses for a gross investment of $3.8 billion. The private clubs, which once held the monopoly in championship layouts, have challengers now in resort courses, both old and new. Among the glamour resorts in the south are Hilton Head in South Carolina, Doral in Florida and Sea. Island in Georgia. Newer courses are also being talked about. Here is a selection: Copperhead at Tarpon Springs, Florida, a 7,031 -yard, par -71 course; John's Island North at Vero Beach, 6,189 yards and par -71; Lake Surf at Southern Pines, North Carolina, 7,000 yards and par -72; The new George Fazio at Palmetto Dunes, Ancient Elms and lush greenery dominate the beautiful Callaway Gardens Golf course at Pine Mountain, Georgia. Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, 6,873 yards and par -70; Arcadian Shores at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, 6,960 yards and par -72. Teeing off across the U.S. means driving across courses of all sizes and all varieties, each a match for every grade of player. Take a pin for a selection, since this mini -guide can do no more than suggest locations ranging from tropical layouts surrounded by palms and live oak, to courses fringed by sandy shores. In between are mountaintop and valley courses, lending a terrible hazard to the game, since the scenery is often so splendid that the player is tempted to lift his head and to slice the approach shot. South Carolina can match the best in quantity and quality, particularly in the Myrtle Beach area and the Grand Strand, a 60 -mile stretch of oceanfront between Georgetown and Loris through which the Intracoastal Waterway runs. Golf has been booming here for little more than a decade, but during this time Myrtle Beach, at the Grand Strand's centre, has established itself as the Canadian golfer's second home. It would be wrong to stress favourites, since tastes differ, but, touching on some will give a general idea of the whole. For example, Myrtlewood, within the Beach itself, has a par -72 championship course ssith enough treeha;ards and water and sand traps to satisfy anyone. Sea Gull, built in an old plantation below Pawleys Island, has large greens and wide fairways and at least 50 sand traps. It has no parallel fairways and is a good test for the medium and the top player. Cyprus Bay, located near Little River, off Highway 17 North, has its own private airstrip - fly in and be on the tee within minutes. There can be flying of a,different sort at the Eagles Nest Golf Club, established in an old pine forst. The chances here are that the eagle family, which maintains squatter's rights on the eighth tee, will be there to watch you critically. On Highway 501, about seven miles from the Beach, is Myrtle Beach National Golf Club, a 72 -hole complex with best grass greens. Litchfield Country Club's 18 -hole champ- ionship course - all Tifton grass - plays to a par -72 and is 6,751 yards from the tournament tees, 6,376 yards from the regular tees. Now, on to Hilton Head Island, that part of South Carolina which lies between Charleston and Savannah, Georgia. Golf here has risen steadily and, along with it, tennis. Sea Pines Plantation, with more than four miles of beach along the Atlantic, has three resort courseg and 39 tennis courts. Among the golf courses is the Harbor Town Golf Links, home of the Heritage Classic. It has boarded sand traps in a sea island setting. Here, too, is the Ocean Course whose 15th whole is said to be the most photographed of any on the east coast. Local players warn that to overshoot it VILLAGE SQUIRE/FEBRUARY 1976, 19