Having discovered an open tee sheet on the club’s internet site, with nary a touring bus in site I dropped into the modest golf shop around 5 p.m. and requested to play as a single. After forking over all of 30 quid I was on the tee in two minutes with an empty golf course in front of me and the sun breaking through the clouds. If Royal Dornoch is all that and a bag of chips, Brora is all that, period – it doesn’t need to be more. What a treat to play this course on the club’s 125th anniversary. I didn’t take a single photograph and don’t recall pulling out the complimentary yardage book – to borrow from Tom Doak, I just hit the ball and enjoyed the architecture and landscape down by the sea.
I played the yellow markers, negotiating 5872 yards to a par of 69. Having grown up on a 9 holer tipping out at 3,000 yards to this day I consider that yardage to be ideal – once again it doesn't need to be more. Me and the old Moon Bag finished in 2:55 despite hitting a few extra pitches and putts. Turf was ideal and invited the ground game and the greens rolled true. The out and back routing is brilliantly interrupted by two short holes, the 6th turned away from the sea and the adjacent 13th turned to it. The 15th through 17th effect slight triangulation with the out-going holes to change the impact of the wind, which was behind me going out and dead into me heading home.
A wonderful tour from Philip Gawth:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,39865.0.htmlComments on individual holes to follow, as well as a photograph of my eagle at the 19th. Brora makes my top ten favorite list.