New Zealand Golf Course Travel Guide
With more than 400 courses countrywide, New Zealand golf clubs offer beauty, diversity and value for money for the golfing enthusiast and with the highest number of golf courses per capita in the world there’s a green here for everyone – literally!
Courses range from top of the line such as Kauri Cliffs in Northland to small rural golf clubs where greens are fenced off and stock graze the fairways, eliminating the need for mowing! At the Rotorua Golf Club in the Central North Island, the 16th hole features a steaming lake and bubbling mud pools; while Lake Taupo’s Wairakei International Golf Course, reputed to have the most bunkers of any kiwi course, is home to NZ’s most famous par five, the 14th, known as The Rogue and named after a geyser which used to erupt in a field nearby.
Scenery may not make the game, but it’s not every day that you have the opportunity to play golf in the shadow of snow-capped mountains, surrounded by lush rolling countryside, brown velvety foothills and an aquamarine river so vivid it almost makes your eyes ache.
Terrace Downs High Country Resort is nestled in the foothills of the Southern Alps, a 50-minute drive from Christchurch. Its championship 18-hole 72-par links style course sprawls over 200-odd acres, and while the walk may take a little longer than most, nobody ever complains! This stunning 6,440 metre long course with its nine lakes and 70 bunkers was laid out by Canadian golf architect Sid Puddicombe, while the back nine, largely designed by David Cox with some input from Fin Hobbs, is almost a signature feature.
“One of the best back nines we’ve played,” wrote Tiger Woods’ former caddy, New Zealander Steve Williams. A sentiment echoed by many when they discover its challenging bunkers sited 20 to 40 metres short of the putting surface. Grassed, they slope to sand level so there’s always room to swing, although your ball obviously won’t go too far.
The most spectacular hole is found on the 16th where the tee hangs over the impressive Rakaia River Gorge and you look down upon fast flowing ice-blue water 200-metres below the course with the bulky range of Mt Hutt towering behind. The green is just a wedge or so away, so you have to carry two ravines that drop all the way to the river through thick native bush. Your tee shot also has to carry a deep pot bunker short of the green and skirt another on the left. A short ball means an automatic reload but the faint hearted will soon discover a bail out area to the left.