I've always been a road trip guy because it seems no matter where I go, there is always someplace to see away from the main attraction. A perfect example is Lawsonia on a trip to Whistling/Blackwolf. I am overjoyed I made the side trip to Lawsonia because it was such an amazing golf course. That road trip was much more satsifying then staying at Whistling for another round would have been.
It depends upon where you go.
In Aiken that's the route I go but those are short trips.
If there are 5-10 compelling courses within a half hour sure. (several areas of Scotland,Dublin, Portrush)
In remote Ireland or Scotland, that won't work as well.
a mix of the two can work well (often with good planning you can stay 2 nights at a time in the same place even on the worst of schleps.
The key for me is no backtracking.
I crack up when I see some of the tours or ProAms fellow pros or members have been scammed on.
They spend 1/2 their day on a bus retracing the same route every day being based in a"partner Hotel" (i.e. provides the best kickbacks to operator and the staff wears kilts)
18 holes daily and 3-4 hours of driving- all to stay in the same castle which happens to be in the center(but has 5 star service
), but not actually near any of the courses
How hard exactly is it to grab your bag and go?
Nothing better to me than staying in a B&B (or better yet a dormy)across the street from the club, eating at the club, and staggering home to bed.
and do it all over again the next day just down the road.
I'm not really there to study courses-I'm there to play them, but often will schedule the same course twice if compelling or if it's at a point where some in the group may need a break while others have second go.
I will say I'd like to rent house in Dunfanaghy or Portsalon and supplement multiple rounds there with a few road trips (very affordable)