Brilliant! Just from my own very scant experience I can say that there is a lot of quality golf going fairly unrecognised on the continent. It mostly stems from the fact that these older courses were very much the preserve of the wealthy and they kept these places very much to themselves. They kept it that way - in Belgium, for instance, there were about a dozen courses from the Golden Age until the mid 60s when Trent Jones built Bercuit. It was the same thing in France with a handful of really good courses around Paris and on the Channel Coast, and one or two (lesser) courses in the south-west and on the Riviera. I think it was St Nom-la-Breteche which started the new wave (1959), though that, too, is pretty private. The real expansion came when the EC ploughed money into agricultural land to take it out of agriculture. Loads of French farmers turned their land into golf courses and such was the level of assistance they got that few of them seem to need to attract visitors or members. Of course it's different in holiday resorts, but get off the beaten track and you can walk onto almost any course and have the place pretty well to yourself.
My wife are planning to take the car and clubs over to Denmark in August. We'll be able to walk out onto Esbjerg, Holstebro, Silkeborg and others without the slightest problem and we'll not have to pay a fortune to do so, either. happily we can stay with friends which means we won't be faced with typically horrendous hotel room rates.