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The back nine is completely different, and is relatively flat and open. Beginning with the easier 10th hole, the course opens out, allowing players to pin the ears back and have a go. But a word of warning; several greens on the back are deceiving, as the slopes can be greater than expected when approaching the pin. Our camp for the night is the Freeway Motor Inn in Warragul. Day 9 sees us taking the short drive to the Mornington Peninsula, which is fast becoming Australia's home of golf, with a spate of new golf courses planned including the Moonah Links, which will not only house the Australian Golf Union headquarters and Australian Golf Museum, but also the Australian Open every three years from 2003. The ambitious project will create an official headquarters for Australian golf, similar to the Royal and Ancient at St. Andrews. Situated just an hour outside of Melbourne, the golf here is simply awesome. There is a tremendous variety of golf courses available including links and resort style courses, which are in excellent condition year round and extremely affordable. Travelers can enjoy stunning coastal views from every corner of the Mornington Peninsula. The Moonah Links project will feature 36 holes built on a region known as The Cups, 1500 hectares of ancient rolling sand dunes along the southern edge of the Peninsula. The land is, as such, ideally suited to links golf. The area is well drained with a climate ideal for growing turf and a quality underground water supply. The National Featuring the Robert Trent Jones Jr designed Old National course, the Ocean course (designed by Thomson Wolveridge and Perrett) which opened in December 2000, and the new Moonah Course, designed by Greg Norman, the Moonah Links project is part of the National Golf Course, which offers players a 54-hole extravaganza of golf. Keep an eye out for an up-coming feature on the National.
Widely regarded as the most well-manicured course in the area, Portsea is a short course by today's standards, but beware! Tight fairways and thick trees require pin-point placement and if the wind is up it can certainly be a tough day. Portsea is known as one of the best wet weather courses in Australia because of the huge amount of sand base, and in January 2002, the course was rated in Golf Australia as No. 25 in the country. Cape Schanck Cape Schanck truly is a unique course, requiring great accuracy in variable winds. Like other courses of the Peninsula, it is situated along the ocean and is therefore open to the elements, and with such dense growth lining the fairways, the wayward golfer needs a handy supply of spare balls. The course is suited to using a golf cart, and more amateur-friendly than its neighboring course, The National.
The par-4 14th is probably the defining hole on the course. You are confronted by a tee shot which needs to be directed between two enormous dunes towards a dogleg. Due to the lack of trees, judging distances can be an onerous task, so allow to play this course more than once. And five-time British Open winner Tom Watson described the 17th as "an exquisite golf hole." And, so, the journey ends. And what a way for it to end! Here on the Mornington Peninsula, we have found what is quite possibly heaven on Earth for us golfers. In fact, there is a story in the making which will concentrate on this area alone, as there is so much that we could not cover here. |
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