Golf > The Course
Lahinch Old Course: a Restored MacKenzie Course
MacKenzie course par excellence,
Lahinch Old Course is a mecca for keen golfers
from far and wide. Apart from the splendour
of its location, Lahinch's MacKenzie Course
has gained worldwide recognition through its
charming idiosyncrasies, and its debt to golf
legends Dr Alister MacKenzie and Old Tom Morris,
and more recently Martin Hawtree.
First amongst the idiosyncrasies
being the goats whose outline adorns the crest
of Lahinch Golf Club, and who act as Met-Men
for all on the course. Local legend claims that
if the weather is fine the goats graze happily
out on the dunes, but when they sense rain approaching,
they seek shelter in the shade of the clubhouse.
And who would dare to disagree with them!
Then there are the Klondyke
(5th) and Dell (4th), amongst the most famous
holes in Irish golf, two original Tom Morris
holes. The Klondyke (5th), a par five, features
a drive into a scenic valley from where one
is (hopefully) expected to play a completely
blind second shot over a monstrous sand dune
to a gently rolling green some 200 yards further
on.
The Dell (4th), a par three,
is one of the most photographed and controversial
holes in golf. One loves it or despises it but
must always admire it. The green nestles between
two steep sand dunes, front and back, and is
completely blind from the tee. To guide the
golfer a white stone is moved along the face
of the fronting hill to indicate the current
pin position. Here, the result of one's tee
shot is very much in the lap of the golfing
gods.
In the 1920s, Alister MacKenzie
capitalized on all the natural features of the
site to create a truly memorable golf experience.
Many of these features were
lost when remodelling was done in the 1930s.
However, in 1999 the Club embarked on an ambitious
project to put back the MacKenzie characteristics.
After extensive screening of many world-renowned
golf course architects, eventually Mr Martin
Hawtree was selected for the challenge. The
choice was made after officials from Lahinch
Golf Club travelled to Royal Birkdale, the venue
for the 1998 British Open Championship, to see
Hawtree's work on that course. Mr Hawtree, whose
father and grandfather before him were also
eminent golf course architects, is a keen student
of the MacKenzie traditions. His plans for Lahinch
fell into five phases, beginning in October
1999, and were expected to take five years to
complete. The Club took the ambitious step of
endeavouring to complete the task in just four
years. Phases 1 & 2 were accomplished by
mid-March 2000. Phase 3 was begun in October
2000 and completed in March 2001. Phase 4, the
most intensive part of the Plan, began in October
2001 and successfully completed in March 2002.
Phase 5 brought the project to completion in
March 2003, after just three and a half years.
In all, there is almost
a complete refurbishment of the course, offering
a new challenge to all its patrons. Lahinch
Golf Club wishes all its members and visitors
alike many happy hours playing the restored
MacKenzie course.