Green Acres Golf Club was an 18-hole regulation length golf course in Galivants Ferry, South Carolina. This course was originally Rolling Hills Country Club.
Currently rated No. 14 by Golf Magazine on their Best Public Golf Courses in South Carolina roster. Originally the North course at Myrtle Beach National, it was named “South Carolina’s Course of the Year for 1996” and in 1997 Golf Digest ranked it among the “Top 10 New Upscale Public Courses in America.” There are lakes, ponds, and marshes coming into play on sixteen holes. Recognized for its No. 3 island green with the “S” and “C” shaped sand traps, and their par-5 No. 6 nicknamed “The Gambler,” because it tempts golfers with a shortcut to the green via an…
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Best Rate: $73
This course is built on the site of two rice plantations (some old ruins remain), and is a mix between plantation and traditional styles. It features lakes, old oaks, wildlife, waterways, numerous traps, waste bunkers, wetlands and average size, but tough, greens. Their 1st and 15th holes have received some local renown. Some development is also encroaching a bit on its aesthetics. They completely restored their greens to their original size with hearty Champion Mini Dwarf Bermuda, dramatically improved their drainage and added peripheral irrigation to improve the edges of the fairways and the rough. More recently, they did some…
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Best Rate: $61
This course has had some ups and downs of late, but currently they’re more up. This course was built on the historic Longwood Plantation, whose heritage as a successful antebellum rice plantation on Waccamaw River. It features lakes, moss-draped oaks, pines, and cypress. Taking advantage of the natural terrain and vistas with its undulations, Gary Player made his first course in the Myrtle Beach area something to be proud of. In 2001 it was named the Myrtle Beach Golf Course of the Year. In 2003 they completed extensive renovations including the greens, bunkers, clubhouse and tree removal. Recently, the Myrtle…
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Best Rate: $48
This track was one of the first “plantation” golf courses. It features wide-open fairways and large greens with some elevations and undulations. The front nine is tree lined, while the back nine is lined with houses. There is water in play on 15 holes here, and over 100 bunkers await errant shots. Their signature hole, the 518-yard, par 5, 18th was rated by the local “Sun News” as one of the best finishing holes in the area. With its new Champion Dwarf Bermuda greens, some reworked teeboxes and some savvy bunker reshaping the River Club is in the best shape…
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Best Rate: $54
This is the longest of the three Myrtle Beach National golf courses. This tract features wide fairways, numerous doglegs, fairway bunkers, natural hazards and large well-bunkered greens. Winding through a pine forest, wayward shots can easily find trees blocking your next shot. Water only comes into play is on No. 18, a 221-yard, par 3. They virtually rebuilt this course in 2003, and conditions have been consistent ever since. With their Mini Verde Ultra Dwarf Bermuda greens and replenished bunker sand, play at the West course has definitely improved.
This track was originally Skyway Golf Club. This facility, located on Restaurant Row, has three nines, the Lakes, Oaks and Ravine. The Ravine is shortest of the three, and gets its name from a 70-yard wide chasm. You can only get to this facility via the most unique mode of transportation in the world of golf, an aerial tramway across the Intracoastal Waterway. All three layouts play basically the same feel with somewhat rolling, narrow, tree-lined fairways, ponds, lakes, limited bunkering and average-sized greens with some undulations.
Formally known as “Buck Creek,” which was nominated by Golf Digest as “America’s Best New Course for 1990.” In 1998 the renamed “Aberdeen” was the only recipient in the Carolina’s to receive Golf Digest medallions for value and service. This 27-hole tract with the Meadows, Highlands and Woodlands nines is tucked among hardwoods along the Waccamaw River. It features extensive mounding, wide landing areas and bent grass greens, and presents a different feel, look and challenge on each nine. As with all of the courses located in the low-lying Highway 9 corridor, “cart paths only” are a frequent occurrence here.…
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Best Rate: $38
While this layout is a Jack Nicklaus “signature course,” it is far better than many of his higher-priced spreads. It features deep pot bunkers, vast waste areas, extensive mounding, tight fairways, fast greens and a great little par-3 (No. 13). This is one of the better-drained courses in the soggy Highway 9 corridor. Their 10th hole (1st. picture above) has become one of the most recognized golf holes in Myrtle Beach, and their Champion Ultra Dwarf Bermuda greens are consistently some of the best in town.
Like the name says, this is a traditional-style layout in the land of plantation-style courses. It opened in 1996 by being named the Best New Public Golf Course by Golf Digest. This was the first course in the Myrtle Beach area to incorporate women-specific considerations in its design and construction, resulting in Golf for Women naming it a Top Fairways track. It features wide fairways, lots of sand, water in play on ten holes, seven holes in the marshes, large, undulating greens, and two island greens one of them is a par 4. While this is a development course, and…
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Best Rate: $48
Currently ranked No. 11 on Golf Magzine’s Best Public Golf Courses in South Carolina roster, No. 12 in South Carolina by Golf Digest and No. 8 by Golfweek on their Best Courses You Can Play in South Carolina roster, the Tournament Player’s Club of Myrtle Beach was originally, only known for being where the crotchety old PGA pros, has-beens and hanger-ons used to play geezer golf in the PGA Senior Tour Championship (now laughingly called the Champions Tour, when it should be called the “Who Dat Depends Tour”). This course, dubbed “The Pinehurst No. 2 of Myrtle Beach,” features narrow,…
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Best Rate: $97
This old course, built on the site of a Southern rice plantation, was the first golf course in the Litchfield-Pawley’s Island area and was the flagship for the historic plantation courses to come. It has maintained its original features over the decades, including the narrow mature tree-lined fairways, hard doglegs, giant oaks and lakes, as well as the player-friendly greenside pathways for bump and run approach shots. In 1996 it was ranked one of the “World’s 50 Best” by Conde Nast Traveler. No. 18 was picked by local golfers as one of the Top 100 Golf Holes on the Grand…
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Best Rate: $48
The Avocet - for many years a Top 5 golf course on the MBGA Player’s Top 20 golf course - was always the best of the original four courses that were at this facility, with consistently some of the best greens in town. It features multiple tees, elevated tees, wide landing areas, contoured fairways, double fairways, grass bunkers, moderate amount of sand, strategically placed water, fast, elevated and even a double green serving two holes. In 1994 Golf Digest named it as one of The Top 10 Best New Resort Courses in America, and in 1997 they named the 14th…
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Best Rate: $54
Currently ranked as No. 26 in South Carolina by Golf Digest, we have nicknamed this course “The Yo-Yo,” because it has constantly gone back ‘n forth from great to lousy. Currently it is in very good shape, and since the Myrtle Beach National Company bought it things here have improved remarkably across the board, especially staff attitudes. Built in a Low Country forest overlooking vast salt marshes it features fairways dotted with water and homes. There are obstacles of some kind on every hole with large Tif Eagle Bermuda grass greens surrounded by bunkers. Their toughest holes are No’s 2,…
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Best Rate: $61
This golf course, designed by Clyde Johnston, was built on the site of a former rice plantation. This track is heavily wooded and framed with oaks and has a gentle undulating terrain. It features five sets of tees and freshwater lakes abutting many of the greens. It was the home of the LPGA’s unsuccessful foray to Myrtle Beach when it hosted the nationally televised the LPGA and Kathy Ireland/Greens Competition Classic, which late became the LPGA’s Susan G. Komen Classic, both tournaments tanked. Under the previous management the course had declined dramatically, but now with it being a part of…
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Best Rate: $48
Overlooking the Waccamaw River, this is one of only a handful of private, member-owned golf clubs on the Grand Strand. In 1986, Golf Digest dubbed it the No. 1 Golf Course in Myrtle Beach. In 1996 they rated it the 15th Best Golf Course in South Carolina and the 16th Best in 1997. It features generous rolling, tree-lined fairways, grassy, buff-colored bunkers, lots of Love grass covered mounds (which Tom Fazio dubbed his “Wachesaw look”) along with some exceptional multi-level, elevated greens, especially No. 18 overlooking the Waccamaw River. This tract is getting a bit long-in-the-tooth, and needs a face-lift,…
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Best Rate: $48
This heavily touted track is currently rated No. 3 by Golf Magazine on their Best Public Golf Courses in South Carolina roster and No. 3 by Golfweek on their Best Courses You Can Play in South Carolina roster. Recently Caledonia’s sister track, True Blue, has been getting the better reviews, but if you’ve got the scratch, and want to play one of the most talked about courses in town, then tee it up here. Caledonia, with their Champion Dwarf Bermuda greens, remains as one of the areas most impressive and award winning tracks. Caledonia is the ancient Roman name for…
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Best Rate: $105
This is the easier of the three Myrtle Beach National courses. Water comes into play on only six holes, and the well-guarded greens are relatively small. Winding through wetlands and hardwood forests, it’s a relatively flat tract, but uneven lies are common because of some of the mounding, and their new Mini Verde Ultra Dwarf Bermuda greens are a big plus. Numerous waste areas also come into play here.
Currently ranked No. 14 on Golf Magazine’s Best Public Golf Courses in South Carolina roster and No, 15 in South Carolina by Golf Digest, the Heritage is, historically, one of the top 5 plantation golf experiences in the Myrtle Beach area, and while they had had some problems in the past with their greens they are back on our “must play” list. This is one of the earliest of the “plantation style” golf courses. It was built on the site of the pre-Civil War True Blue and Midway rice plantations. It winds through over 600-acres of giant magnolias, 300-year-old oaks,…
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Best Rate: $48
As this course has become more and more of a housing project with a golf course, the quality of play has declined proportionately. This facility built its reputation on its challenging layout and friendly people, and while the friendliness continues, the experience comes up short. It features three 9-hole tracts: The Waterway, The Lakes and The Cypress, each one with its own feel and challenge. Old pro, Ray Floyd, worked closely with the architect Tom Jackson to design a track with the feel of courses set in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The Waterway 9 is definitely the…
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Best Rate: $52
This course was built on some rare (for this area) high ground sitting in the middle of wetlands and dense forest, and requires over 4,000-feet of bridging to traverse, which truly sets it apart from the other courses in the Myrtle Beach area. The 1st and 9th holes are truly islands, surrounded by wetlands. It features dynamic elevation changes, tight fairways, sand, waste and oyster shell bunkering, elevated tee boxes and Tif Dwarf Bermuda greens, which are medium sized with moderate undulation. Like its sister courses, Man O’ War and the Wizard, this is one of the most unique courses…
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Best Rate: $58
Currently ranked No. 30 in South Carolina by Golf Digest, No. 10 by Golf Magazine on their Best Public Golf Courses in South Carolina roster and No. 7 by Golfweek on their Best Courses You Can Play in South Carolina roster, this heavily-wooded, plantation-style course is Caledonia’s younger, yet bigger, sister, and has surpassed its more mature sibling. At some point Golf Digest also named it as one of America’s 100 Greatest Public Golf Courses. It features uncommon natural elevations and naturally rugged terrain with six water holes, plenty of sand, average size greens and hidden cart paths. They also…
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Best Rate: $94
This tract is John Daly’s first signature course when he was the hottest guy in golf. Remember that? The first twelve holes are rather flat, wide-open and wind-swept links-style layouts, while the last six are more a more traditional-style. A couple of holes are extremely tight, It features dune fields, wide fairways, large waste areas with gorse-like vegetation, pot bunkers, water in-play on six holes and the Daly Tees, for the macho crowd. The pro shop staff can be a surly bunch. Rumor has it that they are going to put a Hooter’s in the snack bar, and a statue…
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Best Rate: $40
Here is yet another of Golf Digest’s “clueless rankings” foolishness. The Grande Dunes Resort track is currently ranked No. 88 on Golf Digest’s 100 Greatest Public Courses, while being ranked No. 23 on their Best in South Carolina rankings far behind both the TPC of Myrtle Beach and the Heritage Club. It is also currently rated No. 19 by Golf Magazine on their Best Public Golf Courses in South Carolina roster. While there are no real “dunes” and it has an adjacent six-lane highway adding traffic noise, this course gets very favorable reviews. Like its sister course, this is one…
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Best Rate: $75
This is one of the newer golf courses in the Myrtle Beach area. It was designed by PGA Tour great, Nicky Price, and a virtual unknown designer, Craig Schreiner. They have termed their design “inland style,” whatever the hell that means, but we think the correct label would “Double Design style,” because it is two types of golf courses rolled into one. While it does have wide fairways, the front nine is kind of a parkland design with tree-lined fairways; the back nine is more of a links layout. This course has limited play due to its membership structure, it…
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Best Rate: $75
Here is yet another of Golf Digest’s “clueless rankings” foolishness. Tidewater is currently ranked No. 94 on Golf Digest’s 100 Greatest Public Courses and No. 25 on their Best Golf Courses in South Carolina rankings behind the TPC of Myrtle Beach, the Heritage Club, neither of which appear on their 100 Greatest Public Courses. They are No. 7 on Golf Magazine’s Best Public Golf Courses in South Carolina and No. 6 by Golfweek on their Best Courses You Can Play in South Carolina roster. This is a traditional-style tract, located on a beautiful, rolling, salt-marsh peninsula, with nine very scenic…
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Best Rate: $75