Must play courses: (just my opinion - in no particular order)
- Western Gailes (Ayr)
- Prestwick (Ayr)
- N. Berwick (E. Lothian)
- Royal Aberdeen
- Murcar (adjacent to R. Aberdeen)
- Gullane 1 (E. Lothian)
- Brora
- Royal Dornoch
- Turnberry Ailsa
- The Old Course
- Stonehaven (north of St Andrews - not a links, but seaside...on the side of a hill - crazy fun!)
Skip Kingsbarns and any other new course - it's Scotland...you are going the for the history. So play the old courses!
Other stuff:
- take lots of zip lock bags in all sizes and put them in your golf bag. If it rains, nothing will stay dry. Put towels, gloves, keys, wallet, phone, watch, dry socks, etc. in them. You will thank yourself.
- I always take a flimsy, empty nylon gym bag with me. I fill it up with all the stuff I buy and carry it on the planes on the trip home. My luggage has been lost several times, but the exotic golf goodies for me and my golfing buddies always makes it home!
- I've taken to buying durable/permanent items - belts, bag tags, ball markers, sweaters, leather scorcard holders, vests, towels for use as wall hangings, etc. - instead of shirts and hats.
- Stay in B&Bs. You'll likely stay with some very nice people in their homes and get a much better feel for the country and culture. And the full Scottish breakfasts are usually terrific. The Scottish Tourist Bureaus star rating system is very good and predictable. We stay at 3 star or four star B&Bs. 3 stars are nice and 4 stars are really nice. (the first 3 of my six trips I've made, we stayed at 4 star hotels/5 star resorts: Turnberry, Auchterarder House, Old Course Hotel, etc. I much prefer the B&Bs!
- Last three trips, I never booked a tee time in advance. (2 players on two of the trips, 4 players on the other one). We stay a couple of days at a B&B and carry a good map of all the golf courses in Scotland. Sometimes we just stop in if we're driving when we see a course we like. Or maybe we call at the end of the day for the next morning. we almost always end up playing where and when we want.
- drive yourself. it's fun and you get a better feel for things. Keep the steering wheel in the center of the road, just like in the US! That tip alone has made driving a relative breeze. And go around the roundabouts as many times as you need to until you are absolutely sure that's where you want to go. Nothing wrong with taking a few laps vs. making a wrong turn.
- See some castles. I know I you're there for golf, but there are some spectacular sights: Stirling Castle/Wallace monument, Dunottar Castle (in Stonehaven), Doune Castle (where they filmed Monty Python/Holy Grail)
- Last two times at TOC...no tee times and we all played. Didn't do the ballot - just showed up at the starter bright and early and put our names in. We get split up/paired with threesomes, usually. But that's great fun, especially if you get paired with a local. Happened to me 6-7 years ago...my son and I ended up having pints and dinner with the man and he even invited me to join The St Andrews Golf Club...with him as my sponsor. I've been a member for 6+ years and watched The Open Championship from the top floor of the Clubhouse in 2010!