I have no idea! But, I can tell you this there are some fabulous golf holes and golf courses in the Biarritz area of La Belle France. Biarritz golf spawned the legendary Jean Geriailde, and Catherine Lacoste, the 1970 US Women’s Open Champion, who still runs the exciting and testing, Chantaco Golf Club at nearby St. Jean de Luz. Jean Van de Velde learned to play his golf at Hossoger, a wonderful old-fashioned parkland course, also nearby. Biarritz native, Arnaud Massey became the only Frenchman to win The Open Championship at Hoylake in 1907. Golf de Biarritz-le-Phare is located on Avenue Edith Cavell in the heart of Biarritz in a prestigious neighbourhood featuring plush homes and splendid views of the ocean. The course was built on high ground in 1888 by architects Tom and Willie Dunn and renovated in 1920 by Harry S. Colt, and you can look out over red roofed houses at the azure Atlantic far below. A modest 6000 yards with par of 69, the Le Phare course is superbly manicured and is no pushover. Claude Rosseau, who is Director-General of Golf in the city, oversees one of ‘the best training and practice areas in the world’ located at the 9-holes Ilbiarritz Golf Course only a stone’s throw from the heart of the city. Designed by Pierre Thevenin and opened in 1988, this municipally-owned facility is used by top professionals from all over Europe. In the hills, slightly inland are Makila and the excellent Arcangues. Moliets, designed by Robert Trent Jones, has all of his hall marks - length, wide twisting fairways, large jagged-edged bunkers, wispy rough, mature trees set well-back from the fairways and water but also there is the added, surprise on the back nine of four dramatic seaside holes when you suddenly burst out of the forest. Seignosse is a testing, tree-lined, sand-based, hilly golf course that is regularly rated amongst the top three (out of 700+) in France.