WINTER SIZZLER $61.00 All Inclusive!

November 20, 2011 by Kim  
Filed under Great Golf Package Deals

WINTER SIZZLER $61.00 All Inclusive!

Winter Read more

MARCH MADNESS $110.00 All Inclusive!

November 19, 2011 by Kim  
Filed under Great Golf Package Deals

MARCH MADNESS $110.00 All Inclusive!

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2012 Free Summer Golf!

November 18, 2011 by Kim  
Filed under Great Golf Package Deals

The best golf value at the coast is at The Winds Resort Beach Club!

With rates that include a full hot Southern Breakfast Buffet each day there is no better golf value around!

2012 FREE SUMMER GOLF – 6/01/2012 to 8/31/2012:

We’re talking free green fees for all Winds’ guests on a selection of top area courses FREE. All you pay in, addition to your regular lodging rates, is carts and tax.

Courses include: Azalea Sands, Brierwood Golf Course, Carolina Shores, Sea Trail Byrd, Sea Trail Maples, Valley at Eastport, Wedgefield.

After 12:00: Brunswick Plantation

Sign up on our Home Page to receive all the latest golf news and specials updates!

To book this golf package please call the The Winds Resort Beach Club Toll Free: 800-334-3581 or Email:reservations@thewinds.com

“Its All About Golf At The Winds!”

pooleastward1The Winds Resort Beach Club offers golfers a choice of oceanfront suites overlooking palm trees, subtropical gardens and our breathtaking powder-sand island beach or, for groups, our spacious 4, 5 and 6 bedroom Resort Cottages.

All packages include a Hot Southern Breakfast Buffet and use of all of The Winds Amenities: Three Pools (one indoor), Garden Bar Restaurant and poolside oceanfront Tiki-Bar.

The Winds’ deserves its reputation for being “a golfer’s paradise”, boasting nearly 20 of the “Grand Strand’s” best courses within 8 miles, and close to 100 courses within 30 minutes drive. Golfers love our FREE Summer Golf Program!

FALL FORE GOLF 2012!

June 20, 2011 by Kim  
Filed under Great Golf Package Deals

FALL FORE GOLF $99.00 All Inclusive!


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Course Review: Sea Trail’s Byrd

April 29, 2011 by Kim  
Filed under Golf News

Golf Course Review | Proof is in the putting at Sea Trail Resort’s Byrd Course Greens switch helps revitalize course.
Sea Trail Resort’s Byrd Course at Sunset Beach, NC is a prime example of why so many courses on the Grand Strand are replacing bentgrass greens with new ultradwarf Bermudagrasses.

The pine tree-lined Willard Byrd layout that opened in 1990 has been revitalized by the changing of the greens last year from bent to Champion Bermuda.The Sun News – Pines line the right side of the first hole, a par-4 that plays 350 yards from the white tees.
“The greens are great. They are huge, they don’t have any blemishes and are really true,” said Josh Unger of Myrtle Beach, a student at the Golf Academy of America who took part in a review of the course in late March.

“Any time you can get a green that’s big and relatively flat that is ideal. These greens are big and they have some undulation in them but not too much, and they’ll hold shots and aren’t too hard.”

Joining me and Josh, who carries a 10.4 handicap, in the review foursome were John Hasenstab of Murrells Inlet, a retired educator with a 17 handicap, and Grace Caravello of Conway, a retired Verizon systems analyst with a 24 handicap.

“This course had a tremendous variety of holes,” John said. “There are many very nice holes with scenic aesthetics.”
The greens were lightly overseeded with poa trivialis for the winter and that grass is being fully overtaken by the Bermuda this spring. “The greens held and putted great,” John said.

The course’s yardage of 6,740 doesn’t require a driver off every tee and includes a number of doglegs both right and left. “A variety of clubs can be used off the tee and there’s a high amount of risk-reward,” Josh said.

There is some water on the layout but most of the difficulty stems from bunkers. Both waste and traditional bunkers pinch fairways, and 15 of the 18 greens are protected by multiple bunkers. “The course was very fair with good shots and not overly punitive for bad ones,” John said.

The course’s aesthetics include stone walkways to delineate parking areas at tees and greens, dead trees in some waste bunker areas, a plethora of wildlife including alligators and a variety of birds – there’s an osprey nest on the 18th fairway near the green – and attractive housing, including Charleston-style homes on some holes.

“The course was in great condition,” Josh said. “The manicuring on this course is really nice. They definitely take time and do the work to make it nice.”

Women have a significant advantage on many holes with a total yardage of 4,621 yards. “The par-3s were easy for women and some of the par-4s were short enough to make it in regulation,” Grace said. “The par-5s were short also.”

Likes
The driving range has target greens and flags with measured yardages, and there is a chipping green with a bunker.
John enjoyed the tee-time separation of 10 minutes, compared to eight minutes at many clubs, and the policy to start every group on the first tee. “What a pleasant experience it is,” John said. “We didn’t push the group in front of us and we weren’t pushed, and that must be attributed to the 10-minute tee times.”
Grace thought the staff was friendly and helpful and enjoyed the rolling terrain in and around many fairways. “Fairways were hilly and fun to play,” she said.

With combined green and cart fees between $40 and $55 year round, “it’s a great value,” John said.

Josh appreciated the tree-lined layout and detailed yardage book. “It’s very detailed and helped a lot having not played the course before,” Josh said.

Dislikes
There are small hole depictions on the scorecard and yardage books are available for $3, but there weren’t hole depictions on tee boxes. “If we didn’t have the yardage book we would have been lost because there were no hole descriptions at the tee boxes like a lot of courses have, and there are some things you can’t see on the tee box,” Grace said.

The sand was good when abundant in bunkers, but it was inconsistent and thin in spots and had sparse grass growing through some areas. “The bunkers were unkept and irregular in condition,” John said.

Josh thought out-of-bounds stakes created by housing were too close to some fairways, and Grace didn’t believe there was enough selection of women’s clothing in the pro shop.

Par-3s
Par-3 distances are very manageable at between 174 and 202 yards from the tips. The 174-yard second hole measures 167 from the white tee and requires a carry over water to a green that is angled to the back right, slopes to the front and left, and is surrounded by four bunkers, including an expansive bunker to its left.

The 190-yard seventh is 167 from the white and has a drive over a waste bunker decorated with a pair of small dead trees. A mildly rolling green is situated between five bunkers.

The 186-yard 12th measures 163 from the white and requires a drive over a water hazard that extends past the left side of a wide green that contains a couple rolling areas. A bunker covers the entire front of the green and there are smaller bunkers back and back left. “It’s a great par-3 over water with wind factoring in,” John said.

Several bunkers are snuggled around the green of the 202-yard 16th hole, which is 155 from the white.

Par-4s
None of the par-4s were overwhelmingly long, measuring between 368 and 412 yards. “There’s a good variety of par-4s,” John said. “Some were easily reachable in two, some were tough.”

The 387-yard first hole doesn’t require a driver and is somewhat benign, though it has water far left. The 412-yard fifth is straightforward with five deep bunkers protecting the fairway and one protecting the front left of the green.
The 396-yard sixth has a fairly narrow landing area caused by bunkers pinching both sides of the fairway, with the left bunker prominent off the tee. The eighth, 10th and 11th holes are either sharp or slight dogleg rights, the 15th is a sharp dogleg left, and the 404-yard slight dogleg-left 14th has a very narrow landing area for a driver, with water coming into the fairway from the left that is blind from the tee and bunkers on the right.

“They have a nice mix of dogleg lefts and dogleg rights,” Josh said. “There’s a lot of risk-reward from the back tees on the hard dogleg par-4s. You can hit to the dogleg with a hybrid or take on the dogleg with a driver.”

Par-5s
Three of the par-5s measure between 515 and 542 yards, while the final par-5 offers birdie and eagle possibilities. Only one par-5 is more than 495 yards from the white tees. “All the par-5s were fair and scoreable,” John said.

The 525-yard third hole measures 468 from the white tee and features a drive over water to a fairway on the left that must be placed between a pair of fairway bunkers at the turn of a sharp dogleg right. The fairway is a narrow corridor through pines and is rolling with mild mounding on both sides. The green has a mild plateau back right and is protected front and left by one bunker and right by another. “It’s a wonderful hole that requires a good drive and solid approach,” John said.

The 542-yard ninth is 517 from the white and turns slightly left with five bunkers to maneuver beginning deep in the tee shot landing area. The 528-yard 13th is 493 from the white and has bunkers both left and right in the fairway off the tee, and a green-fronting water hazard cutting across the fairway beginning 70 yards from a green that bends around a back left bunker and features a mild ridge through the middle.
The short 469-yard 18th measures 442 from the white and is intimidating in the yardage book with water abound, but the landing area is generous. “Once you get off the tee you’re good to go toward the green,” Josh said.
“All the par-5s were reachable in two good shots, though No. 13 may require a layup short of the water with 80 yards in after that,” Josh said. “They had tight landing areas off the tee with a driver but then the fairways opened up into large bunker-surrounded greens.”

Favorite holes
Josh’s favorite hole was the par-4 17th, a 382-yard hole turning slightly right with an elevated tee, water down the left side and a green well-protected by four bunkers. “A good drive will get you around 130 to 140 yards into the green, and the hole is aesthetically pleasing from the tee,” he said.

John enjoyed the par-4 14th, measuring 380 yards from the white tee, because “it required a center drive and punished you left or right.” He also liked the par-5 13th and third holes. “The third, with a drive across water at an angle into rolling hills to a dogleg right, was a great hole,” John said.

Grace liked the par-3 second hole, which measured 106 yards from the red tee and required a short shot over water to the green.

Least favorite holes
Josh’s least favorite hole was the 407-yard par-4 fourth, a sharp dogleg left turning around a waste bunker and tree line. A tree extending beyond the waste bunker on the left side of the fairway forces players to hit a well-placed tee shot of 240 to 270 yards to have a clear shot at the green, and OB lurks on the right. “You really only have about 30 yards to place your ball in the fairway off the tee and have a shot at the green,” Josh said.

John’s least favorite hole was the par-3 16th. “It was the least aesthetically pleasing hole on the course,” he said.

Grace’s least favorite hole was the par-5 13th, which measured 382 yards from the red tee and required about a 60-yard carry over water to reach the green. “I had to go over the water on the fourth shot and couldn’t make it over on the third shot, and I hate having to lay up like that and lose a shot.”

By Alan Blondin – ablondin@thesunnews.com

To view Blondin’s blog, Green Reading, or Q&A Forum, Ask Al, go to TheSunNews.com.
Contact ALAN BLONDIN at 626-0284.
Read more: http://www.thesunnews.com/2011/04/03/2076935/proof-is-in-the-putting.html#ixzz1KqbHstMn

Fly Direct Toronto To Myrtle Beach

March 16, 2011 by Kim  
Filed under Golf News

Porter Airlines began seasonal, direct-flight service from Toronto to Myrtle Beach, S.C. on February 17. Porter provides four weekly round trips through May 23 with flights scheduled on Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays. The first week of service features flights on Monday and Thursday.  This is the second year Porter Airlines has offered seasonal service from Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport to Myrtle Beach International Airport. The four weekly flights double the amount offered last year.

Canadian golfers can look to Porter Airlines to provide affordable, direct access to Myrtle Beach (approx. 45 minutes from The Winds).

Connecting flights are available in Toronto for Thunder Bay, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec City and Halifax. Reservations can be made immediately at FlyPorter.com or through travel agents, with one-way fares from Toronto starting at $179, plus fees and taxes.

Porter AirlinesPorter Airlines is Canada’s third-largest scheduled carrier, based at Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport.  Porter is an Official 4 Star Airline® in the World Airline Star Rating® by Skytrax, committed to offering speed, convenience and service as part of a premium travel experience. A refined journey begins on the ground with comfortable airport lounges and service-oriented team members.  The experience continues seamlessly in the air with spacious interiors and well-appointed crew.

Passengers enjoy complimentary services, including free in-flight wine, beer and premium snacks, all aboard modern aircraft.??The airline currently serves Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec City, Moncton, Halifax, St. John’s, Thunder Bay, Sudbury, New York (Newark), Chicago (Midway), Boston (Logan), and has seasonal flights to Mt. Tremblant, Que. and Myrtle Beach, SC.
Join VIPorter frequent flyer program to earn a free flight after as few as five one-way trips. Visit www.flyporter.com or call (888) 619-8622 for more information.

Father & Son Team Classic

March 16, 2011 by Kim  
Filed under Golf News

Mark your calendars for “Three Days of Golf and A Lifetime of Memories” when on July 21-23, 2011 fathers and sons from all over will unite for the 14th annual Golf Dimensions Father & Son Team Classic.

As little boys grow into men, they gain much of their knowledge from their fathers, absorbing the father’s behaviors, values, work ethic and a sense of who they will be.

Of course all of that information and understanding doesn’t just happen to pass from parent to child through osmosis. As is often the case, father and son will discover a shared passion or common ground ideal for cultivating the closest of bonds.

Whether it’s Little League baseball, Pop Warner football or a Saturday morning soccer league, sports often serve as the vehicle for forming that special friendship. But is there any better way for a father and son to learn about life and each other than by playing a round of golf together?

Almost 15 years since one of golf’s most famous fathers, Earl Woods, proclaimed that his prodigal son would do more than any other man in history to change the course of humanity, we live in a world capable of connecting us to our neighbors on the other side of the globe with the click of a button. Yet, we’ve become so distant. Golf gives us the opportunity to bridge that gap. The most humbling and human of all sporting pursuits, golf teaches us patience, honesty and persistence.

The Father & Son Team Classic tournament committee remains committed to bringing participants only the highest quality golf experience Myrtle Beach has to offer. This year’s tournament host sites include Barefoot Golf Resort, Grande Dunes Resort, Founders Club at Pawleys Island, Legends Resorts, Myrtle Beach National Golf Club, Sea Trail Golf Resort, The Members Club at Grande Dunes, Thistle Golf Club, and Wachesaw Plantation East.

In 2010, the Father & Son team Classic attracted players from 43 states and seven foreign countries. More information about the 2011 tournament is available online at fathersongolf.com.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Tournament Registration: Golf Dimensions Superstore locations.

Teams with Father’s Last Name Beginning with A-K Register at:
Golf Dimensions Superstore (Myrtle Beach Location)

Teams with Father’s Last Name Beginning with L-Z Register at:
Golf Dimensions Superstore (North Myrtle Beach Location)

Welcome Reception at Pine Lakes Country Club 6-8pm

Practice Rounds – Make own arrangements

Thursday, July 21, 2011

8:30 a.m. Round #1 – Two Man Better Ball (80% of Individual Handicap)
Shotgun Start – All Courses
2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Father & Son Skills Challenge & Demo Alley -
The Resort Course at Grande Dunes
Presented by Golf Dimensions Superstore
3:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Closest to the Pin & Putting Contest – Golf Dimensions Superstore

Friday, July 22, 2011

8:30 a.m. Round #2 – Two Man Alternate Shot (Modified Pinehurst Scotch)
(40% of Total Team Handicap)
Shotgun Start – All Courses
2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Father & Son Skills Challenge & Demo Alley – The Resort Course at Grande Dunes
Presented by Golf Dimensions Superstore
3:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Closest to the Pin & Putting Contest – Golf Dimensions Superstore

Saturday, July 23, 2011

8:00 a.m. – 9:00 a.m. Round #3 – Two Man Captain’s Choice Competition
(30% of Total Team Handicap)
Shotgun Start – All Courses
Starting time for shotguns will be staggered according to golf course
12:30 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Awards Ceremony / Player’s Cookout – The Resort Course at Grande Dunes