The Clubhouse After the Round
What Americans don't expect.
The round ends at the 18th green. The experience ends two hours later, in a chair by the window, with a glass in your hand.
Read →Honest writing about golf travel. No sponsored content, no filler — just what we know from being there.
What Americans don't expect.
The round ends at the 18th green. The experience ends two hours later, in a chair by the window, with a glass in your hand.
Read →And other things that seem impossible until they don't.
Every one of these fears dissolves within 24 hours of landing.
Read →Why the best day of your golf trip won't involve golf.
A morning on the Spey with a ghillie. Lunch at a pub that hasn't changed since 1940. The day everyone remembers.
Read →The non-golfer doesn't need activities. They need a reason to love Scotland as much as you love the golf.
Read →The same country, three different trips.
The Fife pilgrimage. The East Lothian golf coast. The Highland adventure.
Read →A golfer's honest guide to choosing.
Both extraordinary. Both different. And the ferry between them that most Americans don't know exists.
Read →Elie, where you check for boats with a periscope. Brora, where cows have right of way. The rounds that turn a trip into a story.
Read →From someone who's done it both ways.
The operators charge $10,000. We booked the same courses and hotels for $5,500. Here's every line item.
Read →Good.
The Old Course ballot rejection might be the best thing that happened to your trip.
Read →The handicap certificate that nearly ended the trip. The wind that turned a 7-iron into a 5.
Read →The numbers nobody puts on their website.
Real 2026 prices — green fees, hotels, flights, car rental, and the Guinness budget nobody mentions.
Read →Ballybunion, Lahinch, Tralee, and the hidden courses in between. The stretch of coast that changes how you think about golf.
Read →Combining Scotland and Ireland in one trip.
Two hours from Portrush to Ayrshire. Two countries. A dozen courses. One trip of a lifetime.
Read →England has more links courses than Scotland. Kent, Lancashire, Norfolk, Devon — championship golf without the queue.
Read →Three Open Championship venues within 90 minutes of central London. A city break with serious golf.
Read →The same quality. Half the price. No ballot required.
English championship golf runs 40-60% cheaper than Scottish equivalents. Here's why.
Read →Seventy courses. Most are forgettable. The ones that aren't are genuinely world-class. Knowing the difference is everything.
Read →Volcanic landscapes, 12 months of golf weather, and zero American tourists on the first tee.
Read →Where to play when your home course is frozen.
Southern Spain and the Canaries offer championship golf in sunshine at a fraction of Gulf prices.
Read →And it's not even close.
$150 buys you a round of golf, lunch with wine, and a seafood dinner. In Scotland, $150 buys the green fee.
Read →Championship courses within 30 minutes of one of Europe's most vibrant capitals.
Read →The honest comparison.
Portugal is cheaper. For everything. Here's the full breakdown.
Read →An honest assessment.
The courses are immaculate. The hotels are extraordinary. But is the experience worth the premium?
Read →Two cities, two different golf trips.
Abu Dhabi has the better courses. Dubai has the better hotels. Choosing depends on what matters most.
Read →The deals are amazing because the conditions are unbearable. Here's what 110F actually feels like on a fairway.
Read →The two Mexico golf trips Americans actually take.
Different coasts, different vibes, different courses. Here's how to choose.
Read →The food revolution, the courses nobody talks about, and the Baja culture that most tourists miss.
Read →No jet lag. $300 flights. Championship courses. The obvious trip Americans keep overlooking.
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