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Gleneagles Resort &
Spa - Luxury Golf Vacation Destinations Provided By Scotland Luxury Golf Tours.
Gleneagles is one of Scotland's most luxurious 5 star
resorts and a member of The Leading Hotels of the World. Set
in 850 acres of Perthshire countryside, Gleneagles is home
to three of the top Scottish Championship Golf Courses and a
wide range of exhilarating outdoor leisure activities.
Throughout the Hotel, which was named the European Resort of
the Year in 2006, you will find the finest comfort - from
the elegant restaurants to the luxury bedrooms and the
calming environment of the spacious Spa.
The
Gleneagles Hotel and resort also houses three of the finest
championship golf courses in Scotland:
The
King's Course, opened in 1919, is a masterpiece of design,
which has tested the aristocracy of golf, both professional
and amateur.
James
Braid's plan for the King's Course was to test even the best
players' shot-making skills over its 18 holes.
You
find out all about it with your first approach shot. If you
have driven straight and long from the tee, you will have
what looks like a simple pitch to the elevated green. But
you must be sure to select the correct club, because the
shot is always a little longer than you think, with the wind
over the putting surface often stronger than you can feel it
from the fairway. And if you do not make the severely
sloping green, a bunker yawns twenty feet below.
Selecting the right club for each approach shot is the
secret on the King's. It is certainly one of the most
beautiful and exhilarating places to play golf in the world,
with the springy moorland turf underfoot, the sweeping views
from the tees all around, the rock-faced mountains to the
north, the green hills to the south, and the peaks of the
Trossachs and Ben Vorlich on the western horizon.
The
natural beauty of the Queen's Course inspires the world's
most experienced players. The Queen's Course, in its long
history, has played host to some of the world's golfing
greats. The beautiful settings and the challenge of the golf
have attracted such top golfers as Johnny Miller, Greg
Norman, Seve Ballesteros, Tom Watson, and Lee Trevino, as
well as great names from the entertainment and sports worlds
including Sean Connery, Burt Lancaster, Bing Crosby, Jackie
Stewart, and astronaut Alan Shepard (the only man to hit a
golf shot on the moon).
Threading through high ridges on the north and west sides of
the estate, the Queen's offers lovely woodland settings,
lochans and ditches as water hazards, as well as many
moorland characteristics. At 3,192 yards long, the challenge
of the first nine can be deceptive, with even some of the
best players finding it a test to make par into a fresh
south westerly breeze. Do not be lulled into a sense of
false security as you stand on the first tee. The "Trystin'
Tree," or lover's meeting place, after which the hole is
named, is a challenging opener. The ground falls away at
your feet, the fairway swings round to the left and slopes
towards the trees, and there are a couple of cunningly
placed bunkers testing your approach into the miniscule
green.
The
PGA Centenary Course, created by Jack Nicklaus, is a modern
classic. Even for a champion and acclaimed golf architect
like Nicklaus, The PGA Centenary Course was a challenge. It
had to be a great course and, set as it is in the heart of
Scotland, the country that gave the world golf, Nicklaus
described the course as "The finest parcel of land in the
world I have ever been given to work with".
It had
to be unique in its challenge, a course in the modern design
ethos that at its fullest stretch tests the greatest
players, while, in the immortal phrase of Bobby Jones,
“neither offering problems a man may attempt according to
his ability... never hopeless for the lesser player nor
failing to concern and interest the expert."
A
feature of the PGA Centenary Course is the feast of views of
the spectacular countryside in which Gleneagles is set.
Putting on the two-tier second green, you are distracted by
the lush panorama of the rich Perthshire straths. As you
move westwards over the next few holes, the rugged Grampians
come into view on the right, then distantly purple ahead,
Ben Vorlich and the mountains above the Trossachs.
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to contact us with your questions or to make a booking.
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