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Bill_McBride

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Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #75 on: August 30, 2013, 01:04:52 PM »
There was an interesting article in our provincial newspaper yesterday about how traffic at the Port Hawkesbury Airport has increased almost 2000% since Cabot Links opened. Port Hawkesbury is about 50 miles from the course in Inverness. The article states that before the course opened in 2011, there were 20 large jets that landed there in August. In August of 2012, there were 106 large jets that arrived in Port Hawkesbury including Warren Buffet and friends who where headed to Cabot Links.
http://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1150412-cb-airport-sees-stars

Wait until Cabot Cliffs opens, although the existing set up should be very enticing to anyone who loves fun links golf in a relaxed setting. 

Greg Beaulieu

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Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #76 on: August 30, 2013, 04:42:33 PM »
Another article today about the construction of Cabot Cliffs. The Chronicle Herald has just put up a paywall so I don't know if this is viewable to others. I'll post the text also.

http://www.thechronicleherald.ca/travel/1151071-on-course-at-cabot-cliffs



On course at Cabot Cliffs

At the tender age of 33, Adam Calver’s career in building and running golf courses has taken him around the world.

While a move to Bali was probably the one his wife embraced most quickly, it is his new gig in Cape Breton that has him excited to go to work every day.

Calver, a Kingston, Ont., native, moved to Inverness from Asia a month ago and is overseeing construction of Cabot Cliffs, a couple of kilometres up the beach from Cabot Links.

Cabot Links is wrapping up a month in which 3,000 golfers played there, and in its first full year of operation, the course was named one of the top 100 in the world.

The owners of the resort plan to make the Cliffs course even better.

It will surely have a dramatic setting. All 18 holes will have ocean views, seven or eight will be right along the shoreline, and two will be “cliff to cliff,” with tee and green separated by nothing but cliff face and the ocean below.

“Once I saw some of the photos, I didn’t feel like I had to even come see the location,” Calver said as he showed visitors around the spectacular site. “Just seeing the coastline, I knew what we could create.”

A buffer between golfers and one long wrong step will be in the form of thorny, natural rose bushes and possibly some low fencing.

Right now, it is more construction site than golf course, albeit one with golf flags planted in the ground, with heavy equipment moving earth and a massive drainage system being installed.

The construction boom that the Cabot Links resort has brought to the area will continue for at least two years, with the opening of Cabot Cliffs set for July 2015. In addition to the new course, there is another clubhouse and pro shop to build, plus more hotel rooms.

The course itself will feature the same fescue grasses as the Links, with almost no trees.

“We’ll be moving toward the same links-y look, where it’s difficult to tell between the greens and the (surroundings),” said Calver, getting ready for a visit from course architects Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, the two-time Masters winner.

“It’ll be around (6,800 yards) to (7,000), pretty much the same. We’re not really going for a certain length. It’s just where the tees and greens look like they should be. They really allow the land to dictate the holes. They’re not trying to force anything.”

Calver, who helped get Turnberry ready for the 2009 British Open, said one of his professional goals has been to work in as many different climates as he could, with as many different grasses.

Ben Cowan-Dewar, managing director and co-owner of Cabot Links, said the high traffic at the resort’s luxury hotel and restaurants this summer justifies the decision to build a second championship course.

“Despite having only one course, the volume has been really, really strong,” Cowan-Dewar said. “August has been amazing. That (Cliffs) site is so spectacular … and we see such potential, and it’s really key for us, when creating a destination that will draw people, because so much of our traffic this year has travelled from a reasonable distance.

“We’ve had a lot more Haligonians this year than we did last year … and the majority of our market is coming from outside the province. The second course just makes it that much more of a destination.”

The resort owns “a lot of real estate,” easily enough to build another hotel, a spa and even a third golf course, he said.

“There’s no doubt that the number of rooms has been a limiting factor for us this year, and is a big part of the expansion.”

About the Author
BILL SPURR FEATURES WRITER
E-Mail: bspurr@herald.ca

Matt Kardash

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #77 on: September 08, 2013, 04:47:00 PM »
Looking forward to playing Cabot for the first time this Thursday. Making a maritime trip from Montreal. In Charlottetown,PEI right now. It has been raining since last night. Not very optimistic for firm and fast conditions with all this rain. Hopefully they got less in Inverness. Also looking forward to watching golfers play from my hotel window!
the interviewer asked beck how he felt "being the bob dylan of the 90's" and beck quitely responded "i actually feel more like the bon jovi of the 60's"

Charlie_Bell

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Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #78 on: September 08, 2013, 06:19:25 PM »
Keep the faith, Matt.  The forecast looks dry Monday-Wednesday.  With sandy soil and steady winds, things could be fine by Thursday.

Gary Slatter

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #79 on: September 13, 2013, 11:00:24 AM »
We played Cabot on Wed and enjoyed everything except the walk!  Two old guys, my brother and I teed off at 8 am and finished with the same two balls 3.5 hours later.  No wind and temp around 80F.  Loved our room, great staffing everywhere (young smiley faces and very good local people, NS should be happy).  Many Cabot players were from the southern US, great to see, loved to hear their breakfast comments as they read THE GLOBE and MAIL newspaper with nothing about Syria on the front page!

We played Highland Links the day before.  The combo of these two courses is as good as it gets ANYWHERE that I have played, andI can't make up my mind which course is the best.  As it rains today, in PEI, I'll try to figure out a winner.
Gary Slatter
gary.slatter@raffles.com

Guy Nicholson

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Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #80 on: September 13, 2013, 11:06:19 AM »
Many Cabot players were from the southern US, great to see, loved to hear their breakfast comments as they read THE GLOBE and MAIL newspaper with nothing about Syria on the front page!

I'm sure they took it in stride that they were in another country with news events of significant national implications. :)

Matt Kardash

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #81 on: September 15, 2013, 02:41:48 PM »
I played Cabot this past Tuesday and had my wife walk along with me. It was my first ever round on a true links golf course. The links conditions were in my favour as I drove it pin high from the back tees on the 1st hole! 385 yard hole.  :o Welcome to links golf!
Other highlights included:
- Smashing a 2-iron into the wind on the 230 yard 7th. The pin was in the front and I watched my ball trickle past the hole and down into the big swale in the middle of the green.
- Putting it from 20 yards short of the 12th green to a back pin and getting my putt to about 5 or 6 feet.
- After a 340 yard drive off the 13th I had 240 yards (blind and over the hill) and hit a 4-iron down in humps and hollows between the double green. Trust me when I say that even though I was putting for eagle I would have been better off 100 yards short of the green in the fairway. I have never had a more impossible, twisting, up and down putt in my life. The contours in that green have to be seen to be believed.
-Not hitting the clubhouse on the home hole!  8)

I'm still trying to figure out if that 14th green is too big? I played in moderate wind and the shot felt SO easy. I felt like I could have thrown the ball downhill onto the green. All four of us in our group hit the green, and two of us nearly aced it (seriously). I get that in a really strong wind it is a different story. I had a left to right wind from the back tee (103 yards) and hit a 3/4 lob wedge to about 20 feet.

The 8th hole is the other really easy hole. I really liked it though. I liked the quirk of the mound in front of the green. It's a simple long iron and pitch though. Nice breather hole.

I have seen some people knock the look of the clubhouse but I really liked it. Really simple and modern looking. It's really neat how it literally sits about 20 feet left of the 18th green.

I really, really really enjoyed the course. I played the back tees felt that even with some wind the course was very playable. The holes and views were beautiful and the strategy was right on the mark. I will always remember my playing partner land the ball short right of 16 and his ball perfectly using the contours to feed its way around that valley of sin and end up right near the hole. Amazing.

My wife snapped some photos as I played. They may be more of the scenery than the "golf". If I see some nice ones I will post them.
the interviewer asked beck how he felt "being the bob dylan of the 90's" and beck quitely responded "i actually feel more like the bon jovi of the 60's"

Gary Slatter

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #82 on: September 15, 2013, 07:48:11 PM »
?     Did anyone get the Player's Book or Guide before they played?   I couldn't find one, the starter didn't have any, I'm sure one would have helped my brother and I as we played the 2nd hole!  and others.
Gary Slatter
gary.slatter@raffles.com

Bill_McBride

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #83 on: September 15, 2013, 08:18:56 PM »
?     Did anyone get the Player's Book or Guide before they played?   I couldn't find one, the starter didn't have any, I'm sure one would have helped my brother and I as we played the 2nd hole!  and others.

I bought one in the pro shop before round one.

Still didn't help.  That's one of the best par 5's I've ever played. 

Has anyone played their second shot onto the terrace right?   It just seems like not enough reward for all the risk. 

Shane Wright

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Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #84 on: September 16, 2013, 10:04:17 AM »
?     Did anyone get the Player's Book or Guide before they played?   I couldn't find one, the starter didn't have any, I'm sure one would have helped my brother and I as we played the 2nd hole!  and others.

I bought one in the pro shop before round one.

Still didn't help.  That's one of the best par 5's I've ever played. 

Has anyone played their second shot onto the terrace right?   It just seems like not enough reward for all the risk. 

Bill, I have seen this question posed in a couple different spots but I'm not sure I've seen anyone answer it yet.  After recently playing Cabot, the "answer" seemed pretty evident to me. I don't believe the terrace on the right is intended as a strategic line of play.  I'm not even sure that 1% of 1% of golfers playing the hole would strategically try to go there.  The prevailing wind at Cabot Links, according to the answers I received from a couple of different folks on the staff, is left to right on #2.  (i.e. into the wind on #7, downwind #12, etc).  In my opinion, the terrace on #2 is simply a landing area for the wayward shots often caused by the prevailing wind.  It is an all world par 5, but I can't imagine ever trying to go that direction.  

Bill_McBride

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #85 on: September 16, 2013, 11:26:06 AM »
?     Did anyone get the Player's Book or Guide before they played?   I couldn't find one, the starter didn't have any, I'm sure one would have helped my brother and I as we played the 2nd hole!  and others.

I bought one in the pro shop before round one.

Still didn't help.  That's one of the best par 5's I've ever played. 

Has anyone played their second shot onto the terrace right?   It just seems like not enough reward for all the risk. 

Bill, I have seen this question posed in a couple different spots but I'm not sure I've seen anyone answer it yet.  After recently playing Cabot, the "answer" seemed pretty evident to me. I don't believe the terrace on the right is intended as a strategic line of play.  I'm not even sure that 1% of 1% of golfers playing the hole would strategically try to go there.  The prevailing wind at Cabot Links, according to the answers I received from a couple of different folks on the staff, is left to right on #2.  (i.e. into the wind on #7, downwind #12, etc).  In my opinion, the terrace on #2 is simply a landing area for the wayward shots often caused by the prevailing wind.  It is an all world par 5, but I can't imagine ever trying to go that direction.  

Strategically it would be a great place to play from.  You could see the pin for starters, and it would be possible to get close to left pins from that terrace.   I'm just not sure most players are accurate enough to play a safe second over there.  

Matt Kardash

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #86 on: September 17, 2013, 02:54:01 PM »
?     Did anyone get the Player's Book or Guide before they played?   I couldn't find one, the starter didn't have any, I'm sure one would have helped my brother and I as we played the 2nd hole!  and others.

I bought one in the pro shop before round one.

Still didn't help.  That's one of the best par 5's I've ever played. 

Has anyone played their second shot onto the terrace right?   It just seems like not enough reward for all the risk. 

Bill, I have seen this question posed in a couple different spots but I'm not sure I've seen anyone answer it yet.  After recently playing Cabot, the "answer" seemed pretty evident to me. I don't believe the terrace on the right is intended as a strategic line of play.  I'm not even sure that 1% of 1% of golfers playing the hole would strategically try to go there.  The prevailing wind at Cabot Links, according to the answers I received from a couple of different folks on the staff, is left to right on #2.  (i.e. into the wind on #7, downwind #12, etc).  In my opinion, the terrace on #2 is simply a landing area for the wayward shots often caused by the prevailing wind.  It is an all world par 5, but I can't imagine ever trying to go that direction.  

I'd say the hole plays almost more into the wind than anything, maybe into and from the left. It certianly takes two good hits from the back tee to get it onto that top level. I kind of mis-hit my driver, then hit a 2-iron and was right in the upslope of the big hill.
the interviewer asked beck how he felt "being the bob dylan of the 90's" and beck quitely responded "i actually feel more like the bon jovi of the 60's"

Matt Kardash

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #87 on: December 01, 2013, 10:09:47 PM »
My wife walked along with me as I played Cabot in September. She isn't a golfer so she usually wasn't focusing on taking "architecture porn" type pics that people here would want to see. However, I did extract some that showed some of the courses features. She mostly took pics on the front nine. By the time the back nine rolled around she lost interest in taking pictures.

Standing near the 1st tee, looking up the 18th fairway.


Walking down the 1st fairway. The scale of the property is huge.


Looking at the 1st green. My drive from the back tee ended up pin high in the rough in bank of the pot bunker right of the green. 380 yard drive off the first tee was a nice welcome to links golf. I think I got lucky that my drive hit the upslope and stopped there instead of continuing over the back.


Looking up the 2nd fairway


3rd hole


3rd green with 8th in background. Something about the way the green sits with that coffin bunker makes me think of Pete Dye.


4th hole bunkers that must be cleared off the tee.


View of the 9th hole. Probably taken from somewhere near the 11th green.


11th hole wraps around the harbour. I would say based on the reaction of people that this is the prettiest part of the property. It is so idealic and serene. The most intimidating tee shot on the course by a mile. From the back tee the fairway looks tiny and all you see is the harbour to the left and dunes to the right.


View of the expansive property from somewhere near the 12th hole.


15th hole. I believe it was on this hole (or the 16th) that I saw someone in the group ahead play a shot from down on the beach back up the cliff towards the green.

« Last Edit: December 01, 2013, 10:24:30 PM by matt kardash »
the interviewer asked beck how he felt "being the bob dylan of the 90's" and beck quitely responded "i actually feel more like the bon jovi of the 60's"

Dan Herrmann

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Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #88 on: December 02, 2013, 08:11:57 PM »
Damn, I love Canada!  (PS - I grew up 3 miles from Ontario in New York)


Bill_McBride

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Re: Cabot Links Visit - Report
« Reply #89 on: December 02, 2013, 09:59:26 PM »
Damn, I love Canada!  (PS - I grew up 3 miles from Ontario in New York)



I went to Vancouver and Victoria in June and Nova Scotia (Cabot Links and Highland Links) in August.  I love Canada too!

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