GO
TO A GOLF RESORT, EVEN IF…..
By
Janet Steinberg
Even if you hate the game… even if
you’ve never played the game…even if you’ve always laughed at people whacking a
little white ball over hill and vale…you should not pass up the chance to
accompany a golf devotee on a getaway to a golf resort.
Even if you will never step foot on the
green, (if you even know what a green is), you’re going to love
it. So while your golfing companion swings away in drizzling rain or
oppressive heat, you can be chilling out in in style at any one of the
following resorts:
KOHLER, WISCONSIN…THE AMERICAN CLUB: The American dream...The American way…The
American Club.
As long as there is an America, there
will always be an American dream. Since the birth of our nation,
immigrants have been coming to the United States in search of that
dream. There was a time, some 100-plus years ago, when
hundreds of those immigrants headed to Wisconsin where they could find work at
the Kohler Company, manufacturers of state-of-the-art plumbing fixtures and
faucets. These young immigrants lived in squalor in nearby
Sheboygan.
Walter Kohler, third son of the Austrian
immigrant founder of Kohler Co had his own American dream. He wanted his
workers to maintain the work ethic and social graces that they had brought with
them from 'the old country'. His visionary concept for a quality standard
of living found concrete expression in the building of The American Club,
dedicated June 1918.
The Tudor-style American Club is a
world-class 5-star resort listed on the National Register of Historic
Places. Located 55 miles from Milwaukee, it might well be the best-kept
secret in the Midwest. The golfer in the group will revel at four Pete
Dye-designed championship golf courses at Whistling Straits (The Straits and
the Irish) and at Blackwolf Run (The River and The Meadow Valleys).
For the non-golfer, The American Club
offers a plethora of recreational and dining options …from cross-country
skiing…to spa-ing…to shopping…to factory touring. At the Kohler
Design Center you will be amazed, and amused, by Kohler’s own “great wall of
china”, a floor-to-ceiling display
of hundreds of plumbing fixtures in all shapes, sizes and colors.
KOHLER’S GREAT WALL OF CHINA |
WEST
BADEN SPRINGS, INDIANA…WEST BADEN SPRINGS HOTEL:
Forget the West Baden Springs Hotel of yore. More than a century, and half a billion dollars
later, this 1902 hotel has been meticulously and elegantly restored as the
upscale half of The French Lick Resort. When the hotel first opened,
journalists proclaimed it the Eighth Wonder of the World. Saved from
the brink of extinction, the West Baden Springs Hotel is no less a wonder
today. West Baden’s extraordinary 1902 design included a breathtaking
6-story domed atrium and architectural elements that were modeled after the
great spas of Europe.
DOMED ATRIUM FROM A BALCONY GUEST ROOM |
Over a century later this National Historic Landmark is the
reigning grande dame of the Midwest. The original
massive Rookwood Pottery fireplace dominates the circular court and white wicker
rocking chairs circle the hotel’s wrap-around veranda.
ORIGINAL ROOKWOOD POTTERY FIREPLACE |
Relaxing in a rocker, overlooking the
manicured grounds, one might become disturbed by a small symbol that is part of
the design of the hunter green railing that surrounds the veranda. At the
time the hotel was built, the symbol was associated with wholesomeness,
well-being, good fortune, and renewal. It was a symbol appropriate to use
in 1917 within the context of a health resort. However, World War II drastically
changed the way in which that symbol was viewed by the world.
That symbol is the swastika!
Brass placards, intermittently placed
around the railing, explain the swastika design with the following words: “The
West Baden Springs Hotel veranda railing was constructed in 1902, long before
the swastika symbol was used in WWII. Many cultures throughout the
past 3000 years utilized the swastika symbol to represent life, sun, power,
strength, and good luck.”
So just relax and rock away on the porch
while your companion works his way around the 8102-yard Pete Dye course carved
into a hillside that offers a variety of elevation changes and course
terrain. Its narrow fairways and ever-changing bunkers are a
challenge for even the best of players.
A bronze sculpture of Pete Dye stands in
front of The Mansion Clubhouse. The plaque on an adjacent rock
states Pete Dye’s feeling about the kind of golf course he
built: “The ardent golfer,” stated Dye, “would play Mount Everest if
somebody would put a flagstick on top…golf is not a fair game so why build a
fair golf course”.
PETE DYE PROCLAIMS “GOLF IS NOT A FAIR GAME SO WHY BUILD A FAIR GOLF COURSE" |
PINEHURST, NORTH
CAROLINA…PINEHURST RESORT:
Well into her second century, the Grande
Dame of North Carolina has undergone many
facelifts. Yet she is still as lovely and charming as she was
in her flaming youth. As in any successful transformation, her changes
have been skillfully executed without altering the overall appearance of the
patient.
Born on January 1, 1901 to wealthy
Bostonian James Walker Tufts, she was originally named Carolina. At
the beginning of 1974, her name was changed to Pinehurst in honor of the
village in which she was born. The opulent Carolina Hotel opened January
1, 1901 with ten guests. By March, it was catering to 350 elite
guests from the East, the South, and the Midwest. Today,
the majestic Carolina Hotel with its signature copper cupola and sweeping
verandas has been dubbed the “Queen of the South”.
THIS GRANDE DAME IS "THE QUEEN OF THE SOUTH" |
Encircling North
Carolina’s largest frame hotel is an open porch lined with a raft of white
wicker rocking chairs. Lazy
white ceiling fans stir the clear Carolina air. Serene silence is
disturbed only by the tinkle of an ice cube in a frosty mint julep.
Your golfing
companion can spend an entire week challenging Pinehurst’s unique golf
courses. Its eight courses make it the largest golf resort in
America. Pinehurst’s #2, along with #8 and #4, are consistently
ranked among the world's best courses. Sam Snead said, “I have always
rated Pinehurst #2 as my #1 course.”
PINEHURST’S “PUTTER BOY” WAS SCULPTED AS A SUNDIAL IN 1912 |
While golf
may be Pinehurst’s claim to fame, your sybaritic self can indulge in tennis,
bicycling, boating, bowling, croquet, fishing, and spa-ing. A
day spent at the Spa at Pinehurst is a day of renewing your soul and your
spirit. The Pinehurst Signature Massage is pure tranquility. The Carolina
Peach Nourisher, a full body exfoliation with a peach and pecan scrub, is
followed by an application of peach-scented shea and mango butter that will
leave you feeling, and smelling, like a peach noodle.
Dining at Pinehurst is another memorable
activity. After dinner, nothing could be finer than a stroll in the
quiet, genteel village where grand old homes and tree-shaded lanes reflect an
old New England where time seems to have stood still. For more than
a century, this wonder-filled resort, has taken its guests back to an era when elegance defined grand hotels… to
a time when life wasn’t lived, it was played.
Some things never
change. Aren’t you glad they don’t?
MACKINAC ISLAND,
MICHIGAN …THE GRAND HOTEL:
Mackinac (pronounced Mac-ki-naw) is no
ordinary island. An abundance of horse-drawn carriages await visitors to
this island where motorized vehicles are not permitted. From the moment
you step off the Mackinac Island ferry, you’ll know that you had not only
stepped back in time, but you also will have lost all sense of
time. A horse-drawn carriage, driven by a liveried coachman,
will convey you to the Grand Hotel.
AN ELEGANT, LIVERIED HORSE-DRAWN “TAXI" |
As you wind your way up the bluffs, the
stunning Victorian architecture of the Grand Hotel takes you back to another
century. And what a grand hotel it is! This circa 1887
island jewel, set on a bluff above the historic Straits of Mackinaw, might well
be the most enchanting destination in Michigan.
THE HISTORIC GRAND HOTEL |
The majestic 660-foot covered porch of this stately grande
dame, bedecked with 43 white Grecian columns, 180 geranium-filled flower
boxes and 88 rocking chairs, is pristine reminder of the elegance and glory of
a bygone era.
660-FOOT PORCH, WINDING AROUND THE HOTEL, CLAIMS TO BE THE WORLD’S LARGEST PORCH |
Once inside the Grand Hotel you will be
immersed in the fantasy world of renowned designer Carleton Varney, one of
America’s most renowned interior designers, dubbed “The Chagall of the
Decorating World” because of his love of color. When a guest puts his key
in the door, Varney wants the guest to say “WOW!” And “WOW!” it
is.
While you are being wow-ed by Varney’s
unique hotel, your golfing companion will be wow-ed by the hotel’s 18-hole
Jewel Golf Course, one of the most unique golf courses in the
country. The Jewel is comprised of two separate 9-hole courses, The
Grand (across from the hotel with
views of the Straits of Mackinac) and The Woods (in
the interior of Mackinac Island with views of the Mackinac Bridge and the Upper
Peninsula). The two courses are a mile and a half apart, making The Jewel the only course in the country with a
scenic, 15-minute horse-drawn carriage ride between nines. Best golf cart ever!
JANET
STEINBERG is an award-winning Travel Writer, and International Travel
Consultant with THE TRAVEL AUTHORITY in CINCINNATI, OHIO. She is
the winner of 47 national Travel Writing Awards. TEXT AND PHOTOS BY
JANET STEINBERG
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