A topic very dear to my heart.
A trip to Bandon in 2004 was my first REAL exposure to quality golf courses and architecture. I had read an article in Australian Golf Digest about this course in Oregon which had a couple of spectacular photos attached and when the opportunity presented itself I thought I would see what all the fuss was about. That first trip to Bandon was so special and had a profound effect on my view of the world, quality golf, experiences etc etc.
Then along came Barnbougle and after talking non stop about my trip to Bandon and in particular Pac Dunes, we had a course by the same designer in a remote part of my home country just a few travel hours from my house. I will also always remember my first Barnbougle trip for many of the same reasons as my first Bandon experience.
Now after countless holes at Barnbougle, February next year will mark the 6th Anniversary of our annual trip and a return visit to Bandon to play all four with some Aussie buddies I would rate:
Bandon a narrow winner over Barnbougle for golf. This is comparing the architects in question and only PD & BT vs BD and LF. Narrowest of margins.
For weather Barnbougle hands down. I have been on least a dozen seperate trips and played in more than a two club breeze just once. Last visit to Bandon was 4-5 clubs all week. Whilst fun, it was a grind for 36 holes each day.
Value for money again goes to Barnbougle. Same experience for about a third of the price everyday. And I now live much closer to Bandon.
All round experience - Barnbougle. Less commercialised and feels more homely. Perhaps its the Tasmanian hospitality, perhaps its 100 golfers spread across 2 courses vs 500 spread across four, perhaps its the garlic prawns
but a Barny experience has only been bettered by Sand Hills for me so far.
Nevertheless both very special places and dear to my heart. Both have shown me what good golf and memorable experiences are all about.
I cant wait to get back and play the Preserve when it opens and learn the intricases of the Lost Farm when I make the pilgrimage back home to Australia.
No golfers life experiences can be considered fulfilled without a visit to both at some point.
Take a moment to sit on the 16th tee at Bandon or the 4th green at LF (honorable mentions to about a dozen other locations) and if you cant find peace and happiness give the game away