Name, Location & Phone   Private Rating # Par Yards
             
Belfair Golf Club # 757-7710
Belfair Plantation
East
West
#

#
69.3
69.6
18
18
71
71
6,900
7,080
             
Berkeley Hall # 815-8444
Berkeley Hall Plantation
North
South
#

#
73.9
74.5
18
18
72
72
7,117
7,126
             
Colleton River # 689-2582
Colleton River Plantation
Pete Dye
Jack Nicklaus
#

#
73.7
72.1
18
18
72
72
6,101
6,708
           
Crescent Pointe Golf Club
U.S. 278 # 785-2600
  # 72.9 18 71 6,700
             
Devil's Elbow # 785-6182
Moss Creek Plantation
North
South
#

#
70.6
70.0
18
18
72
72
6,536
6,891
             
Eagle's Point Golf Club
U.S. 278 # 686-4457
  no 72.5 18 71 6,781
             
Executive Golf Club
U.S. 278 # 686-6400
  no 30.0 9 30 1,665
             
Hidden Cypress Golf Club
Sun City # 705-4999
Okatie Golf Club
Sun City # 705-4999
 
semi

semi

73.1

68.8

18

18

71

72

6,946

5,955
             
Hilton Head National
U.S. 278 # 842-5900
National to Player
Player to the Weed
Weed to the National
no
no
no
69.3
69.0
69.1
9
9
9
35
36
36
3,126
3,029
3,034
             
Island West Golf Club
U.S. 278 # 689-6660
  no 72.1 18 72 6,803
             
Old Carolina Golf Club
Buck Island Road # 785-6363
  no 70.4 18 72 6,772
             
Old South Golf Links
U.S. 278 # 785-5353
  no 70.4 18 72 6,772
             
Rose Hill Golf Club # 842-3740
Rose Hill Plantation
  semi 72.9 27 72 6,808







Old Carolina

By Joel Zuckerman

he tree canopy marking the entrance to the Old Carolina Golf Club is reminiscent of the stately Avenue of the Oaks across the street at Belfair Plantation. Of course Belfair is the playground of the privileged few. To gain access to the luxury lifestyle and golfing riches contained therein requires a bare minimum outlay of half a million dollars, and in most cases, significantly more than that.

Old Carolina, by contrast, is a lovely daily fee property where even high season, prime time greens fees will provide enough cash back from a hundred dollar bill for a burger and a few beers in the grillroom. Afternoon rates, shoulder season and combination packages with sister course Old South can minimize the associated costs drastically, making this Clyde Johnston design one of the best values in the region.

Fine, so it’s affordable, but is it good golf? Absolutely. Built on the site of a former thoroughbred horse farm, Old Carolina’s serene setting in a series of high-grounded meadows is unlike most area courses. There are a smattering of houses on the property as well as an unsightly power line, but little else distracts from the pastoral location. The course is less than a minute from route 278, but there’s no hint of the commotion or traffic buzz that are part of the equation at other golf locales located on the same high volume corridor.

Old Carolina plays 6800 yards from the tips, 6400 from the blues and almost 6100 yards from the whites, with slope ratings of 145, 135 and 127, respectively. Neighborhood ball hawkers must have a field day prowling the grounds at dusk. Water and wetlands are abundant, influencing 16 holes directly. Only on the first and tenth, simple and straightforward par 4s well under 400 yards from the blue markers, can players be assured they’ll hole out with the same ball they teed up with. That is provided they don’t hook (on the first) or slice (on the tenth) over the OB fence onto adjacent Buck Island Road.

Mounding on a golf course smacks of artificiality, and there’s a ton of it at Old Carolina. For some strange reason it enhances the experience here though, isolating fairways from each other, and providing individual playing corridors where your foursome seems like the only one on the course. Although length isn’t necessarily a premium concern here, accuracy off the tee is. Dead straight balls will hop down the fairway and provide short iron approaches. Offline tee shots will stop dead into some of the ungainly knolls and rises flanking the fairways. Not only does it necessitate a much longer approach to the green, but often requires an awkward stance as well, with the ball resting well above or occasionally well below your feet.

While the opening nine is perfectly adequate, the rustic nature of the golf course becomes more apparent on the inward journey, particularly on hole eleven. This dogleg par 4, again quite short at 365 yards from the blues, features a major wetland down the entire right side of the landing area. This area of the course is on the western edge of the property, close to the border of Rose Hill Plantation, and is heavily forested. Here the architect uses far less mounding. The omnipresent woods and wetlands provide the feeling of quietude naturally that had to be concocted by bulldozer in the opening sequence of holes.

It’s in this section of the course where the best series of holes are found in succession. The 13th is the signature hole, a 350 yard par 4 with water threatening the left side of the landing area. A long iron or fairway wood tee ball will leave a short iron approach over water to a green ringed by ten pot bunkers. The 14th is an excellent par 3 with a wetland running from tee to green, and the next is a potentially reachable par 5 of 485 yards. There are wetlands off the tee, and water pinching the lay-up shot from both sides; a lagoon to the left and a snaking creek on the right. Bombers have the distinct advantage here, going up and over all the potential trouble and aiming a wood or long iron at a moderately sloping green.

Old Carolina is a fine test, with course conditioning the equal of many private facilities. It would make for a lovely golf course stroll if not for a series of cumbersome cart path rides, necessitated by road crossings in the nascent housing developments. It may not be a walking paradise, but as area daily fee courses go, it’s an awfully nice ride.


#Joel Zuckerman is the author of “Golf in the Lowcountry--An Extraordinary Journey Through Hilton Head Island & Savannah,” available at fine book stores and pro shops throughout the area. His new book “Golf Charms of Charleston” will be released in the fall.

 

For more information or personalized copies visit www.vagabondgolfer.com