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Play Fabulous LI Golf Courses What a Deal golfing MAGAZINE New York’s # 1 Golf Magazine NEW YORK Look Inside NATIONAL EDITION Long Island / Metro NY Edition Early Summer 2018 Chippo 9 The New Golf Game For The Beach, Backyard, Tailgate, And Clubhouse COUNTRY CLUB COLLECTIVE Golf Gifting Made Easy RSI Fundraising Partners

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Page 1: Play Fabulous · Play Fabulous LI Golf Courses What a Deal golfing MAGAZINE ™ New York’s #1 Golf Magazine™ NE ORK Look Inside AL N Long Island / Metro NY Edition Early Summer

Play Fabulous LI Golf Courses What a Deal

golfing™M A G A Z I N E

New York’s #1 Golf Magazine™

NEW YORK

Look Inside

NATIONAL EDITION

Long Island / Metro NY EditionEarly Summer 2018

Chippo

9The New Golf Game For The Beach, Backyard, Tailgate, And Clubhouse

COUNTRY CLUB COLLECTIVEGolf Gifting Made Easy

RSI Fundraising Partners

Page 2: Play Fabulous · Play Fabulous LI Golf Courses What a Deal golfing MAGAZINE ™ New York’s #1 Golf Magazine™ NE ORK Look Inside AL N Long Island / Metro NY Edition Early Summer

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Golfing Magazine22 West Nicholai Street

Hicksville, NY 11801

516.822.5446Golfing Magazine is

published five times per year.

Cover Price: $4.95

Editorial contributions should be mailed to the above address. If you would like them returned they MUST be accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Material accepted is subject to revisions necessary to meet requirements of this publication. The act of mailing or delivering material shall express a warranty by the contribu-tor that the material is original, and is in no way an infringement on the rights of others. Reproduction of the contents of this publication without the writ-ten permission of the publisher is prohibited.

Golfing Magazine is a Proud Member of:

golfingM A G A Z I N E™

PublisherJohn J. Glozek, Jr.

Assistant to the PublisherJohn Glozek

Associate EditorDavid Weiss

Art DirectorJustin Murray

Administrative ManagerMary Madden

Staff Players

Mark Brown, Mike Caporale, Eric Feltman, Mike Gilmore, Paul Glut, Scott Hawkins,

Tom Herzog, Tom Joyce, Steve Feder Mark Mielke, Doug Miller

Contributing PhotographerJim Krajicek

Contributing WritersDon Chiappetta, Bob DeStefano,

Tom Ferraro, Mike Hebron, James Hong, Doug Jansen,

Woody Lashen, Eileen McCaffrey, Peter Stern, Jim Wichert

MET PGA PROFESSIONALS GOLFING MAGAZINE ADVISORSMark Brown* .................................... The Tam O’Shanter GCLen Bush ......................................................... Brookville CCPaul Glut* ......................................................Woodside ClubMike Caporale* ...............................................North Hills CCMike Jacobs ..................................................... Rock Hill GCTom Patri ..............................................................EsplanadeLeigh Notley ............................................Gardiner’s Bay CCEric Feltman* ...................................................Engineers CCEden Foster ....................................................Maidstone GCTim Garvin .....................................................South Fork CCRick Haldas .................................................Sands Point GC

Scott Hawkins*............................................... Glen Head CCMike Hebron .................................... Smithtown Landing GCJoseph Dolezal .............................................. Plandome CCTim Shifflett ................................................. Glen Oaks ClubJack McGown ........................................... Hampton Hills CCJason Caron .................................................. Mill River ClubKevin Smith .......................................... Montauk Downs GCBob Miller .................................................. Bergen Point GCCameron Wood ................................................... Inwood CCRon Wright................................The Golf Club at Middle Bay* Golfing Magazine Staff Player

GOLFING MAGAZINE ASSOCIATESJoe Donahue ................................................. Long Island Golf Association

Long Island • Metro NYEarly Summer

Metropolitan Golf

Writers Association

www.golfingmagli.com

2018

feature

910

11

12

1415

13Brentwood Country Club

The Woods at Cherry Creek

Gull Haven Golf Club

Harbor Links Executive

Holbrook Country Club

Island’s End G & CC

Mill Pond Golf & Catering

Rolling Oaks Golf Course

The Golf Club at Middle Bay

8

from the publisher

4 8 AFTER THE OPENcover story

FREE GOLFFREE GOLF / PARTICIPATING COURSES

16

Chippo: The New Golf Game For The Beach, Backyard, Tailgate, And Clubhouse

Breakfast Ball with David Weiss: Media Day at Shinnecock

Be Calmed in the Brunswick Islands

Pete’s Golf and Golf & Body NYC: A Perfect Combination

Country Club Collective: Golf Gifting Made Easy

Charity Calendar 2018: Outings and events from Summer into Fall

RSI Fundraising: Adding to the bottom line

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20

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Page 3: Play Fabulous · Play Fabulous LI Golf Courses What a Deal golfing MAGAZINE ™ New York’s #1 Golf Magazine™ NE ORK Look Inside AL N Long Island / Metro NY Edition Early Summer

Golfing Magazine - Metro NY / Long Island Edition22

Let’s start with the Brunswick Islands, five barrier islands, six world-class beaches and ten communities perched in the southeast corner of North Carolina, tracing a crescent from the South Carolina border up to the Cape Fear River. It’s about a half-hour from North Myrtle Beach and the beginning of the Grand Strand. But if we think of Myrtle Beach as basically turning the volume up to 11, the Brunswick Islands hums along at a lower volume and less frenetic pace.

It also has 30 golf courses and some of the best seafood around (often cooked in what is called Calabash-style, lightly battered and seasoned. That makes it ideal for golfers look-ing to play as much as they want, at bargain rates, without any teeming sense of haste.

Some friendly number cruncher figured out that the 30 courses on the Brunswick Islands golf menu worked out to 120 miles of fairways, 585 holes and 15 architects (also throwing in 45 miles of beaches). There’s plenty of variety in the play, to be sure. There

was actually plenty right at the resort we stayed at in Sunset Beach, Sea Trail, which has three courses, not to mention a full-blown convention center.

On my visit we played two of them, the Byrd Course (as in designer Willard Byrd), and the Jones Course (Rees Jones). Next time around for the Maples Course, said to be one of Dan Maples’ finest, playing among old oaks and Carolina pines, with five holes skirting the Calabash Creek.

It’s true that one’s sense of agreeable in-dolence in the Brunswick Islands can be compromised by a bad round out on the greensward, but neither the Byrd nor Jones courses, both of which opened in 1990 and share a clubhouse, seemed terribly exacting, with 125 slopes from the under 6,500-yard tee boxes. The Byrd skirts a variety of man-made lakes, which means players may need to skirt a gator or two, as we did, and heed the starting sign to avoid feeding the alligators or, “They May Become Aggressive.”

Water, or avoiding it, is also key on the

Jones Course, as it comes into play on 11 holes. The fairways are wide, the mounding is ample, and large bunkers alternate with pesky pot bunkers to complicate matters. The Open Doctor approved some renovations to his own course, which was a qualifier for the 2006 U.S. Open.

We actually started out our visit with the most highly touted area course, if one is glancing at the Golfweek Best Courses You Can Play in North Carolina list, at any rate, where Cape Fear National will be found. We found it in Leland, a Tim Cate design, and it was a splendid introduction, a natural wonder built in and around a community development called Brunswick Forest.

Plenty of trees, in other words, but as Cate is also a landscape architect, the flora and fauna throughout are fairly jaw-dropping—cochina rock walls, boulders, pampas grass, weeping love grass, cord grass, cypress marsh and wetlands, drive-through waste areas, 1,500 feet of bridges—it’s enough to make one forget about the bunkers and water af-fecting play.

Be Calmed in the BRUNSWICK ISLANDS

By Tom Bedell

Where are the Brunswick Islands?

On the Greensward

Page 4: Play Fabulous · Play Fabulous LI Golf Courses What a Deal golfing MAGAZINE ™ New York’s #1 Golf Magazine™ NE ORK Look Inside AL N Long Island / Metro NY Edition Early Summer

www.GolfingMagLI.com 23

FEATURE

Cape Fear has five tee boxes, but sug-gests four slope-rated hybrid routes as well, essentially offering nine different length options for players, from 4,743 to 7,217 yards. Why don’t more courses do this?

The Rivers Edge Golf Club was a fa-vorite of some players in our group. An Arnold Palmer design in Shallotte, the course plays along the bluffs and tidal marshes of the Shallotte River, and leads up to a final four holes called “the finish on the river.” By the time we reached 15 on a sunny afternoon the sense of peace and quietude was such that I finished the closing quartet in even par.

We had a notable round at Compass Point Golf Club, which is also the subject of some local golf trivia: What was the last full 18-hole course built in North Carolina? Right, Rick Robbins’ design in Leland. Robbins also lives at the development surrounding the course, was having lunch as we finished the round and before too long had joined us.

The president of the American Society of Golf Course Architects in 2013-2014, Robbins is a personable fellow,

and we were soon looking over course diagrams of projects he’s working on in China and listening to stories about how he once actually managed to get Robert Trent Jones Jr. and Rees Jones to pose together for a photograph.

He was pleased with Compass Point: “We started with mostly pine forest here. It reminded me of Pinehurst, and we have similar push up greens. From the start we wanted firm and fast fairways, with open fronts to all the greens.” The well-draining sandy soil helped out there. And, for a coastal course, there’s a near-startling 75 feet change in elevation.

Robbins has done about 150 courses in his career, which has included work with Robert von Hagge and Jack Nicklaus. One of those is another Brunswick Islands course—Crow Creek Golf Club in Calabash.

Now that you know where the Bruns-wick Islands are… it may be time for you to tee it up there.

Tom Bedell is usually pretty calm wherever he is, except after triple bogeys.