I am flying out later today from Stockholm. I had time to fly to Gotland and play Visby Golklubb twice. There are two courses, one the 18 hole course and another which was 9 holes. The 18 hole course includes some seaside holes, but also is routed through an inland areas, some holes with a reasonable amount of forestation (mostly windswept pines), and a couple of holes with a more open feel and character. The nine hole course had quite a bit of variation, with a few holes which appeared to be like pasture land, with interesting mounding and bunkering, with the look of some Scottish links land.
In playing the nine hole course, which is not an executive course and includes two very good par fives, solid to excellent par fours of varying links, and two nice par threes.
The basic elements of the nine hole course underscored the strengths of the 18 hole course. The strengths include greens with lots of contouring and the possibility of quite a few good pin locations and use of strategically minded bunkers which had a nice aesthetic quality. The seaside holes on the 18 hole course probably limit appreciation of the quality of many of the remaining holes for the first time player.
There is ongoing discussion of tree encroachment on some holes and whether removal might improve playability. A couple of the pines do have an aesthetic quality that some might revere and the strong winds contribute to attractive shaping.
There is one new par five which will open up soon. A par five which was the fourth hole was replaced by a solid par four. The newly routed par five will replace the current third hole and connect with the fourth. In my mind, it looks like the trade achieved a better par four and a better par five.
Links to two photo albums are shown below:
https://photos.app.goo.gl/s3NnQs4Fz9SXhgYP9https://photos.app.goo.gl/UZPGcyNgM3GbtKzc8The club was welcoming to me as a visitor. Tee times were hard to come by, so I felt lucky to get in play on two consecutive days.
Charles Lund