You can travel the length and breadth of the Grand Strand to enjoy the work of
Rees Jones, Willard Byrd and Dan
Maples. But the only place you can appreciate these three great architects
together is by walking outside your front door at the Sea
Trails Resort and
Conference Center, just north of Myrtle Beach in tranquil Sunset Beach, NC. And
Sea Trail is the only place in the region where this trio signed their work,
their three "Courses of Distinction" named for the men who left their design
legacy in the only all-amenity resort in the Myrtle Beach area. Yet while
brought together geographically, you'll be astounded at the different
experiences that await you at all three layouts. Many truly believe you can
capture the essence of Grand Strand golf while never leaving the Sea Trail
resort.
Challenging? The Rees Jones Course played host to a local qualifier for the
2006 U.S. Open and Sea Trail also hosted the 2006 Carolinas Senior PGA
Championship.
Playable? All three courses are just under 6,800 yards from
the tips, around 6,300 from the white tees and between 5,500 and 6,000 from the
gold tees, with similar slopes in the 132(back) to 122 (gold) range.
Sea Trail
- The Maples Course was Sea Trail's first, and Golf Digest honored it as one of the
North Carolina native's greatest when the magazine named the course one of the
"Best New Resort" courses in America in 1986. With five holes winding along
scenic Calabash Creek and underneath elegant canopies of century-old oaks and
carved through native Southern pines, the Maples Course is a classic southern
experience, right down to the rocking chairs under one of those huge oaks just
steps from the 18th green.
The Maples Course has its own clubhouse with
an airy, shaded "back porch" overlooking the 18th fairway. It even has its own
custom club-fitting and club-making shop with prices comparable to the mall
stores. The relaxed atmosphere prepares you for a delightful round that will
challenge you, but won't beat you up, unless you spend too much time playing
from behind the thousands of trees that border the course! Possibly the most
scenic of the trio, the Maples Course is known for its wildlife, with nesting
pairs of osprey visible in the spring and early summer.
The diversity of this design is the definition of Dan's layout. Each side
also features a pair of forced-carries on back-to-back holes, challenging your
game just enough to make every round a unique experience. The approach to the
sharply doglegged par-4 seventh, downhill over a pond, prepares you for the tee
shot at the eighth, where you'll drive out of a narrow chute, over a lake, to
reach a wide, diagonal landing area. Then on the back nine, a short carry is
necessary off the tee of this wickedly tight pine-bordered dogleg left par-4,
warming you up for the longer carry you'll need to clear the pond and reach the
fairway of the more wide-open, but uphill par-4 14th.
Though
well-bunkered, all of the par-3s and nearly every other hole on the Maples
Course, offer an opening to run the ball onto the green. Until the finishing
hole, a marvelous little par-4 that should be a driver and a wedge, but that
wedge has to avoid three good sized bunkers in front of the green.
The Sea Trail
- Rees Jones Course and Sea Trail
- Willard Byrd Course play out of a sprawling, shared clubhouse
less than a mile from the quaint Maples clubhouse. While sharing similar
topography, the Jones and Byrd layouts couldn't be more different. Much of
Jones' acclaim has come from his renovations of major championship courses like
Donald Ross' Pinehurst #2, A.W. Tillinghast's Bethpage Black and Baltusrol, his
father Robert Trent Jones' Congressional and Hazeltine and Tom Bendelow's
Medinah for the most recent PGA
Championship. But the man known as the "Open Doctor" has designed four of Golf
Digest's Top 100 on his own and there's no doubt that his Sea Trail layout is a
Rees Jones original.
The signature mounding of the Jones Course is evident from the first drive
off the first tee, the mounds framing the wide fairways around the entire
course. The greens are significantly smaller than those on the Maples Course and
water is visible on 11 of the holes, though not always in play.
Another
unique feature of the Rees Jones Course are back-to-back par-5s to finish the
front side, the shorter eighth hole with a slice of lake piercing almost the
entire approach to the green, the ninth with large, menacing bunkers on the
right hand side in the landing area for the drive and another on the left hand
side on the approach. If your driver's working, you've got a chance for some
serious momentum with the two par-5s, then a short dogleg right par-4 at #10
that wraps around a lake.
You'll very likely hit four different clubs
from the four par-3s, two of them over water. In most cases, Jones has designed
his holes so that if he offers you an open tee shot, there'll be trouble around
the greens, and vice versa. The finishing hole, a potentially-reachable par-5,
is a perfect example. A wide fairway gives way to mounds and bunkers on the
outside of the dogleg right with a well-guarded green providing a small opening
for those daring enough to try to reach it in two.
Among Willard Byrd's
great designs is the Atlanta Country Club, yet his signature course at Sea Trail
is considered one of his most outstanding, and possibly the toughest of the
trio. Built around several man-made lakes, the Byrd Course challenges you with
numerous forced carries and water very much in-play on 10 of the 18 holes. Be
especially wary of the flags signaling almost-hidden hazards in numerous places
on this course. The water's much more obvious as you play from the island tee on
the par-3 second and the 135-yard carry off the tee at the par-5 third. Unlike
many other courses, where waste areas are fairly easy to play from, you're
encouraged to avoid them here.
Featuring the smallest greens of the trio,
Byrd also protects them with some diabolical bunkering through the stretch of
holes 7-12, then asks you again to lay-up and then carry a pond to approach the
par-5 13th.
The 18th of the Byrd and Jones' Courses finish at the shared
clubhouse, home to Magnolia's restaurant and a huge pro shop that includes,
among the latest equipment and apparel, a great selection of kids golf and beach
clothes and accessories.
Beach? We're not just talking bunkers here. The
Sea Trail shuttles can get you to the Atlantic Ocean in five minutes, and the
Village Activities Center features a terraced outdoor pool in a lush tropical
setting with its own deli and bar, a kiddie pool, whirlpool, and indoor
heated pool and whirlpool for the cooler months. The Activities Center also has
a weight room, cardio equipment, fitness classes, a sauna and licensed massage
therapists. Lighted tennis courts and bike rentals are available and
arrangements can be made for fishing excursions, horseback riding and all the
other activities to make a Sea Trail vacation complete. If you decide to escape
the quiet of the resort, the many activities of Myrtle Beach are just a hop,
skip and a jump away.
54 holes of golf on three courses of distinction.
Certainly a spot to circle on your next Myrtle Beach excursion. In fact, you
might just want to spend your whole vacation here. And as you gaze at some of
the homes along your route through these signature layouts, you might want to
ponder joining those who've settled in for a lifetime of great golf. For more
information, visit www.SeaTrail.com or call (800) 624-6601. For tee times,
call (800) 546-5748 or
locally (910) 287-1122. Why travel the
entire Grand Strand to play Jones, Byrd and Maples when they're all in one
place?
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