Well , it’s all a matter of perspective and priorities I suppose.
These are the high flyers one can get on as a green fee player.
Renaissance, Archersfields, Loch Lomond, Royal Troon, and many others are only playable in the company of a member.
To visit the Old Course is £130
To visit the Castle Course is £125
To visit Kingsbarnes is £165
To visit Carnoustie is £130
To visit Prestwick is £125
To visit Muirfield is £185
To visit Turnberry is £175
Nearby alternatives which will still give you a great game of golf but another GCA experience are:-
To visit Nairn is £85
To visit Royal Dornoch is £85
All of these are pretty special experiences and a lot of people are of the same opinion – think “bums on seats” microeconomics.
If you book into a 4star Hotel for a night it’ll cost a similar amount.
If you want to go and see Eric Clapton in Concert it’ll cost you a similar amount.
Even Jaka could find some more expensive pastimes
I think an avid GCA’er would save his pennies for the opportunity and perhaps forego 5 visits to his local pay and play for an opportunity.
It’s not just another game of golf, but a very special golf course architectural experience.
The variety of visual texture and strategy that Mark Parsinen and Gil Hanse have envisioned and realised, together with the outstanding green keeping touch of Chris Haspell, one of the “gingerbread men”, who was also responsible for a large part off the construction, is an exhibition of golf course architecture like I’ve never seen before.
Alone the maintenance of the fairways as “fast and firm” with the straw coloured fescue makes my GCA heart melt.
I could go on and on but I’ll save that for another time, meanwhile digital photos speak louder than words – here’s a few I took while visiting and playing with Jon Wiggett about 6 weeks ago in the blissful highland late summer.
Having said all that there are ways of getting cheaper deals on all of these courses, wether it’s twilight rates, winter rates, knowing members, have a local address, using a local hotel etc.
That’s up to each individual to cut the cloth to suit his style.