Thank you for the warm welcome.
Mac and Kevin: the great thing about golf in Buenos Aires is that you can play it all year round. It never gets too cold in winter, it never snows and the only problem is rain.
Kevin: thank you for your suggestion of courses to play. We will be staying in Sandwich at the Bell Hotel during our stay, so that would rule out New Zealand (going back and forth the same day wouldn't make such much sense). The plan as of today is as follows:
Friday 6-09 Royal St. George's
Saturday 7-09 Littlestone
Sunday still open
Monday 9-09 Royal Cinque Ports
Tuesday 10-09 Prince's
Wednesday 11-09 Rye and back to London
Thursday 12-09 Sunningdale Old
I thought about Hayling for Sunday, but it seems to be a bit far away from Sandwich.
John: don't get fooled. You know how lawyers can dress up things to make them look great. There is a big coastal and sandy area very similar to linksland. Argentina has more than 6000 kilometers (3700 miles) of Atlantic coast. However, there are no more than 2 links courses, although some purists may deny that those 2 even are true links. Mar del Plata Golf Club is one of them. Many holes are definite links, with huge dunes, crispy fairways, hard and very fast greens, wind blowing from every corner and a perfect view of the sea from every hole. However, it has some trees on it, which would make a purist reject it as a links. You can find some pictures at the following website:
www.mardelplatagolfclub.com.ar. Would you say that the clubhouse fits in any UK club?
The other one is Miramar, less than 30 miles south of Mar del Plata. This one has no trees and has an undeniable links atmosphere, but it could also be considered a clifftop course. I will be playing there next weekend with a group of friends. I'll try to take pictures to show you.
I may sound a bit snobbish about when to consider a course as a links, but after reading True Links, I started making myself lots of questions about those two courses.