Carne
Golf Links, also known as Belmullet Golf Links, is one of those
courses that people don't appreciate just how good it is until they
have played it. Hidden on one of the most westerly points in Ireland,
right on the Atlantic Ocean, the links at Carne was the last course
designed by the late Eddie Hackett, who commented of Carne "if
ever the Lord intended land for a golf course, Carne has it".
The last instructions given by Hackett, who
regarded Carne and Waterville as his greatest architectural achievements
was this plea "It took nature thousands of years to create
this and I don't want bulldozers to destroy it. Don't change anything
after I've gone or I will turn in my grave." He can rest
easy. His legacy to the game is one of the most awesome golf courses
ever constructed, with its wild undulating fairways and cathedral
greens.
Towering dunes and rugged landscapes have become
somewhat of a cliché in describing links courses but at
Carne, the terms seem almost inadequate to say the least. Valleys
swing past high dunes, fashioning the most natural, isolated fairways
imaginable, while countless mounds host many tees and plateau
greens, which afford lovely views of the pristine coastline and
adjacent farmland. Right from the first hole a par 4, doglegging
90 degrees to the right, with a green set on a little ledge, great
golf holes come thick and fast. There is quite a degree of blindness,
while the nines are delightfully contrasting. The outward journey
is set against the backdrop of Blacksod Bay, while the homeward
loop with some huge dunes, winds its way out to the Atlantic coastline
and back again.
Carne Golf Links is equally intriguing as it
lies in the Gaeltacht (an area where Irish Gaelic is prevalent
as the spoken language). This is apparent in almost everything
at Carne, from the names of the holes to the club logo based on
the old Irish myth of the "Children of Lir". In fact,
during the famine times of 1848, the narrow country lanes of the
region were lined with emaciated bodies, their mouths green from
eating grass. Never great exponents of fishing and over reliant
on the land, local people died beside a sea that teemed with halibut,
haddock and hake.
It is fitting to leave the last word on this
superb links to the late course architect, Eddie Hackett "I
am thrilled with the way the dramatic Belmullet Course has turned
out and again reiterate my first opinion that ultimately there
will be no better links course in the country; or I doubt, anywhere".
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