Since the reference to a "true Scottish feel" has been referenced negatively here, I'll add one more comment about our posters on GCA.
One of the predominant settlement groups in the SE U.S. during the colonial period were the Scotch-Irish. They often settled in mountainous areas all up and down the Appalachian chain from PA to GA because the land was cheap and the terrain reminded them of home. This included my ancestor John Crockett (after whom my son is named) who settled in a cove outside Wytheville, VA in the mid-1700's. My parents still own 125 acres in that cove, and when visiting I often think that the land looks more like Scotland than Scotland does, having traveled in Scotland other than to a few golf courses.
People that post on GCA.com seem to believe that Scottish golf, indeed Scotland, is links land and links courses. This is, of course, provincial, silly, and incorrect, and may have to do with flying into Scotland on a golf trip and seeing nothing but 4 or 5 of the most famous courses in the country, all on the coasts. Google "Scottish Highlands" and look at the pictures. The land looks EXACTLY like Blairsville, GA, and like most of the Appalachian region. The same is largely true of the Borders region of Scotland as well, by the way.
I don't mean that every golf course in the world that uses the word "Scottish" actually is like Scotland in some way. Golf advertising is no less prone to hype than any other type of advertising. BUT a golf course in the Appalachian mountains might reasonably be able to claim to look like Scotland and actually be correct. Look at the pictures for yourself.