A guide to green fee value for money

Category: Edinburgh & The Lothians (Page 7 of 7)

40. The Renaissance Club. 27th May 2016

A new world class links course to rival its older neighbours   

Round by Invitation.   Par 71.  Quality (out of 5) – 4.5

The Renaissance is a work of beauty - the 10th taken on a nicer day than when I played.

The Renaissance is a work of beauty – the 9th taken on a nicer day than when I played.

The Renaissance Club is one of a small but growing number of exclusive private member golf clubs in Scotland.  It combines a world class golf course and facilities with an American style family friendly country club set up, with fine dining, although the latter type of country club is also now very common in South Africa and Australia.

The course sits just east of Muirfield, its famous neighbour, on the North Berwick coastline.

The tree enclosed 4th green - typical of some of the great links courses in Northern Scotland

The tree enclosed 4th green – typical of some of the great links courses in Northern Scotland

The architect of The Renaissance, Tom Doak, is renowned for his use of natural contours and not “bulldozing” the land and he has laid the course around several copses of existing trees;  therefore this is a course that looks much more like parts of the great links of Carnoustie, Dornoch or Nairn Dunbar, than the treeless Muirfield.

The large 8th Green at The Renaisannce

The large 8th Green at The Renaisannce

The result is a quite magnificent layout that in my opinion will stand the test of time. With widely different tee options, this can be played at 6121 yards off yellow, 6766 yards off white, and a monster 7293 yards off the professional championship blue tees.  It also has 2 very cleverly mixed white/yellow layouts of around 6500 yards, each recommended for different westerly or easterly winds  (see the scorecard below for details).  All layouts have a par of 71.

The tee view from the stroke index par 4 8th.

The tee view from the stroke index par 4 8th.

The course was in excellent condition as expected and although spread out over a much greater area than, by comparison, Muirfield, the green to tee walks were still short some almost in the St Andrews way, I suspect by design.

The highlight of the course for me was the magnificent greens which had combinations of large and subtle borrows, almost all with very tricky surrounds.  Combined with well positioned and deep bunkers, I suspect only the greatest of short game players would win a Scottish Open here.  The Renaissance would be a fine competition venue, with many locations for grandstands which would afford viewing of more than one hole.

The majestic 10th tee view - I lost a ball into the left cliffs on the one occasion I failed to heed my playing partner's advice!

The majestic 10th tee view – I lost a ball into the left cliffs on the one occasion I failed to heed my playing partner’s advice!

I was hosted by the local professional Ross Dixon, whose wise on-course advice enabled me to play to within one shot of my new lower handicap of 19, which has reduced by 4 shots following a number of lessons by Ross himself, the best measure of golf teaching.

The downhill par 3 11th, with a view over the links land

The downhill par 3 11th, with a view over the links land

The Renaissance layout provides changes of direction on almost every hole, and therefore the difficulty changes likewise.  There are many great holes, but the run of 5 holes from the 7th through 11th were for me the architectural and aesthetic highlight;  a long par 5 7th, the stroke index 1 8th hole, followed by 2 excellent par 3s (the infinity greened 9th, and the downhill 11th), which sandwich the cliff hugging shortish par 4 10th.  All these holes can be viewed using the excellent interactive club website application here.

Ross Dixon, after striking another ball far down the middle.

Ross Dixon, after striking another ball far down the middle at the par 4 14th.

It was a real privilege to play The Renaissance and I hope that the venue can be used for competitions so that the wider public can see at close hand what a wonderful course it is. Although it was a private club, it was very far from stuffy, in fact I couldn’t help noticing what a wonderfully relaxing and very family oriented atmosphere existed around the club. There is a lot that the older established clubs around Scotland could learn from The Renaissance.

Some Facts

Course Type: Links

Par 71  (4 par 5s, 9 par 4s, 5 par 3s)

Distance (yellow)  6121 yards

Moly’s Gross Score  91 

Stableford (7/8th allowance) 33

Moly's scorecard at The Renaissance Club - Gross 91

Moly’s scorecard at The Renaissance Club – Gross 91

20. Wee Braids. 3rd July 2015

Wee Course – Massive Views

Summary:  Midweek £22 (round) £12 (9 holes); weekend £23.25/£12.50 .   Par 33.  Value (out of 5) – 3

Detail:  

Edinburgh views beyond the 6th green of the Wee Braids Course

Edinburgh views beyond the 6th green of the Wee Braids Course

The “Wee Braids”, sometimes know as the “Princes Course”, is a 9 hole golf course run by Edinburgh Council.  It is on Braids Hill, on the south side of Edinburgh, accessed from the city via Morningside Road.  It shares the hill with several golf courses, although it is the highest one, perched on top, which makes for quite magnificent views of Edinburgh and the Forth Estuary.   Indeed, it’s worth starting any Edinburgh holiday with a round here to orientate you to the city and area:  with the many restaurants and cafes of Morningside there is plenty to do for non-golfing partners.

Approach to 1st at Wee Braids

Approach to 1st at Wee Braids

It’s a very tricky little course, with several of the tee shots and approach shots being blind, therefore its especially difficult if you only play 9 holes without any local knowledge as I did – plus it was not accessible from my golfshot mobile application, my trusty golfing companion.

5th approach at Wee Braids

5th approach at Wee Braids

The course itself, was in good condition.  It is part parkland, part heathland on the upper slopes, with very dry fairways and greens, making for great difficulty getting your ball to stay on the greens.

The first 2 holes are difficult, being uphill, with the first being the SI 1 hole, and the second played through a thin channel to a very small green.  The blind drive on the 5th is a particular challenge if the wind is off the left.

Wee Braids 8th green

Wee Braids 8th green

The 8th, played through an avenue of trees, demands a straight drive;  my recompense for hitting into the trees was finding about 5 balls, but not my own!

I had a bad start with an 8 at the first, then after some steady holes, a 7 and 8 and the 7th and 8th respectfully, made for a fairly miserable 50, versus the par 33.

Nonetheless, a nice little course, well worth a visit.

 

Key Facts

Course Type: parkland/heathland

Green Fees:  

Round (18 holes):
Weekday (£16.50 (concession) £22.00)
Weekend (£17.35 (concession) £23.25

9 holes:
Weekday (£9.00 (concession), £12.00)
Weekend (£9.35 (concession), £12.50)

Par 33 (0 par 5, 6 par 4s, 3 par 3s)

Distance(white)   2390 yards

Moly’s Gross score50

Moly'd Wee Braids Scorecard - 50

Moly’d Wee Braids Scorecard – 50

 

8. Dalmahoy East; 30th July 2014

Wide fairways, but avoid the bunkers to score well.

Summary:  Cost £65 (midweek).  Par 73.  Score 96.  Value (out of 5) – 2.  

Outstanding view of Edinburgh Castle from the 16th hole

Outstanding view of Edinburgh Castle from the 16th hole

Detail. Marriot Hotels run the Dalmahoy Hotel, Golf and Country Club, which is on the South East of Edinburgh about a 10 minute drive from Edinburgh Airport.   The resort has 2 courses; the East course is a championship layout designed by James Braid and hosted the Solheim Cup in 1992, the West course is a much shorter later addition.

 

Moly and Andy in front of Estate house adjacent the 18th green.

Moly and Andy adjacent to the 18th green.

This was my first 18 holes played since a back injury in early March, so quite a special day, especially accompanied by my son, Andy, who plays off 17.   Despite never being up, I came back from 4 down at the 10th to halve the game;  I was 9 over par after 3 holes, having found the sand in very good condition!

Dalmahoy East is a nice, but quite repetitive course, with many holes feeling much the same – i.e. straight, generous fairway, no carry hazard, trees with limited impact, very light rough, well positioned fairway/greenside bunkers, true and flat-ish green.  There was only one real dog-leg, the 9th.  It is surprisingly accessible to higher handicap golfers playing from the yellow tees, which takes 650 yards off the championship length.

Approach to the 9th over the country house "ha ha" wall, the most picturesque hole

Approach to the 9th over the country house “ha ha” wall, the most picturesque hole

The warm summer had also taken its toll when we played, with several parts of the fairway being brown and a couple of the greens were very dry.  However, one can imagine the course a different challenge when wet and playing its full length.

At £65 for a weekday round and £75 for a weekend round, I had expected a bit more conditioning and challenge, and I would strongly recommend seeking to play using a voucher if available, otherwise you might be disappointed.  We used a Golfcare insurance voucher which made it good value.

Andy teeing to the 17th, "the wee wrecker"

Andy teeing to the 17th, “the wee wrecker”

With a good group discount this would make a good venue for society days, as the Marriot has great changing and eating facilities.

Key Facts

Course Type: Parkland

Green Fees: 

Summer Weekday, £65 per round;  Weekend, £75.

Par 73 (4 par 5s, 11 par 4s, 3 par 3s)

Distance(yellow): 6684 yards

Moly’s Gross score: 96.  (9 over for first 3 holes; 14 over for other 15 holes!)

Dalmahoy Scorecard - a disastrous start!

Dalmahoy Scorecard – a disastrous start!

 

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