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Fairways for Warriors and PTSD

Fairways for Warriors serves our nation’s combat veterans from all conflicts through golf. The organization uses golf outings, instruction, and therapy to assist combat vets in addressing post traumatic stress injury (PTSD) recovery. It also assists combat vets in the general assimilation back into civilian life.

Every single day 22 of our veterans of the armed services commit suicide. The US lost 58,000 lives during the Vietnam War, but over 60,000 lives through suicide since 2010.

What is PTSD. From Psychiatry.org

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a psychiatric disorder that may occur in people who have experienced or witnessed a traumatic event such as a natural disaster, a serious accident, a terrorist act, war/combat, or rape or who have been threatened with death, sexual violence or serious injury.

Many in authority are today challenging the notion that PTSD is a disorder. Instead, they argue that it’s an injury suffered as a result of a tragic, unimaginable event. An injury definition elevates the condition to one that can be resolved vs. a disorder which may continue indefinitely. It seems clear that “injury” is a proper classification since there are promising new therapeutic strategies that are making great strides in curing this injury. Many of these same approaches Fairways for Warriors has been providing for its members for over 10 years.

As a society, most of us are far removed from war as well as those who have fought those wars and served our country. A Fairways for Warriors volunteer hosted a couple of 20 year combat vets at The Masters this year. As they toured the golf course he’d regale them with where many of the iconic shots over the years had taken place. Phil Mickelson’s shot from the pine straw on 13; Bubba Watson’s snap hook wedge around the trees to win in sudden death; Fred Couples ball hanging up on #12’s slope, etc.

As he pointed out these areas and described the shots and their implications, he was met by blank stares. Was this most significant of all golf tournaments of no meaning or consequence to these guys, were they bored with his storytelling, or were they just not up to or care enough about the history of the game??? Later, while pausing and reconsidering their responses, he came to this conclusion. While he was lounging comfortably in an easy chair sipping a glass of wine or beer enjoying watching golf tournaments, these gents have been in the Gates of Hell’s risking their lives for our country. What say you?

Fairways is a 501-3c charitable organization with an extremely light administrative cost below 10% and is recognized as Top Rated by Great Non Profits. The funds are utilized to hold instruction clinics, golf outings, and provide therapy to effectively deal with and resolve PTSD and assist in the general acclimation from military to civilian life.

How can you help? Fairways has chapters in Orlando, Jacksonville, Richmond, Raleigh, Charlotte, San Antonio, and Phoenix, Tampa, and Tidewater. Generally, they hold several golf tournament/fund raising events per year in each chapter. There are numerous sponsorship opportunities from purchasing a tee box sign to becoming a major sponsor.

You can also put a threesome together and be paired with a combat vet which tends to be therapeutic for all involved. You can find their various chapters though their main website link or from their Facebook page. Also, if you’re a combat veteran, you can join the organization here and participate in the free clinics, golf, and therapy while enjoying the fellowship of other combat veterans.

There’s also many other fine organizations out there to assist with our veterans. K9s for Warriors provides service dogs for combat veterans. The Wounded Warrior Project has recovered nicely from their top-heavy administrative cost debacle to help all wounded combat vets and advocate on their behalf. The Gary Sinise Foundation provides programs and services to wounded service members and is one of the highest rated charities devoted to veterans. The Folds of Honor provides educational scholarships for military families. There’s are literally hundreds of organizations out there, here’s a list of those vetted by Charity Navigator.

Golf Trails, first off the South Carolina Golf Trail

Retirement Systems of Alabama initiated the concept of golf trails with the development of the Robert Trent Jones, Sr. Golf Trail, currently a collection of 26 golf courses and 468 holes spread across Alabama. As a result of their success, other states have followed, the Tennessee Golf Trail is composed of Jack Nicklaus designs in Tennessee state parks. The Florida Historic Golf Trail features golf courses across the state designed by golden age golf course architects. The Audubon Golf Trail profiles courses in Louisiana which seemingly fit into their unique, environmentally sensitive settings.

  • The Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, one of South Carolina’s best golf courses you can play!

Our website features the best golf courses and resorts that you can play across the United States. By zooming in and out of our Google Maps feature, you can find the best golf courses to play in any given area. We thought we’d simplify this exercise for you and provide our unique golf trails across every state.

We’ve chosen South Carolina first since it has a variety of golf destinations as well as major cities. Here are the major markets with the best golf course and golf resorts that you can play. If your destination is outside one of the following area, please use our general South Carolina guide. As always, it you find we’ve missed one of your favorites or we have a course which is no longer considered the best in the area, please let us know here.

Columbia Greenville

Hilton Head Charleston and the Islands

Myrtle Beach Pawleys Island

It’s officially Spring if you’re planning your Masters Golf Tournament trip, here’s an option for traveling to the tournament from southern Georgia and Florida while avoiding the high costs of Augusta.

Georgia Southern University Golf Course
  • Statesboro is a city of 35,000 with a lively downtown area featuring  shops, restaurants, and lodging. It’s home to Georgia Southern University enrolling 26,000 students in the University System of Georgia. The University capitalized on an opportunity to acquire the shuttered Southern Links Golf Club in town in 2010. Southern Links was designed by Arthur Davis in the mid-1980s.

His influences and work history in golf course architecture include Robert Trent Jones, Sr, George Cobb, and WIlard Byrd, and ultimately created a partnership with Ron Kirby. Once the University acquired the course, they hired Robert Walker, a longtime Arnold Palmer Course Design architect for a course remake in 2013. So, all in all, a rather substantial pedigree of architectural influences on the Georgia Southern University Golf Course.

The layout meanders through a residential development with most of the holes bordered by homes. It’s a parkland style layout with pine trees lining the broad fairways with water in play on the majority of the holes. Maybe the most interesting stretch comes from 7-9 as it winds counterclockwise around a large lake. The course is also well bunkered with 35 contoured sand traps and pot bunkers along the fairways and greens of varying shapes and sizes. It can play as long as 6,850 yards, 73.2/134, course/slope ratings with four shorter tees down to 5,304 yards.

It’s Spring and time for #TheMasters-where to play golf on your road trip to Augusta just off I-95

The Pinecrest Country Club

Coming up on Spring now and #TheMasters is just a month away. Over the next month we’ll be profiling golf courses convenient to the major Interstates approaching Augusta from all directions for #TheMasters.

The first course in our series is the Pine Crest Country Club and Golf Course located midway between Richmond and Augusta just north of South of the Border in North Carolina on I-95. ultimate tourist trap.

There are rumors of a Donald Ross and Dick Wilson collaboration here, but it’s difficult to confirm their involvement. It does possess many of the characteristics of both architects as it follows along narrow, pine tree lined fairways over generally level terrain with a sparing use of sand bunkers mostly defending the modest, turtleback greens. The course plays to 6,578 yards, 71.3/128, course/slope ratings with two shorter tees, with rates under $40 for a round. Of course, you can always check out our guide here to the best public golf courses for other options to play in every state.

Closest public golf course to SoFi Stadium for the Super Bowl

SoFi Stadium in Englewood has a few nearby municipal and par 3 courses available, but if your in town for the Super Bowl and looking for quality golf, one must head south 20 miles to Rancho Palos Verdes in the hills atop the Palos Verdes Peninsula high above the Pacific and literally a world away from Englewood’s density and traffic.

  • There you will find a Billy Bell classic, Los Verdes Golf Course, providing some of the better views of the Pacific of any golf course in the state, and certainly the least expensive. It’s a parkland style layout with a slight change in elevation along fairways defined by trees above the cliffs of Rancho Palos Verdes. From the tips it plays to 6,617 yards, 72.2/121, course/slope ratings with four shorter tees.

A little further south and out on the tip of the Peninsula is Terranea, a 9-hole, par-3 oceanfront layout and part of the Terranea Resort.

The course features views of the Pacific and Catalina Island from all the holes as it flows over a scenic setting once occupied by Marineland. There’s a good amount of elevation change with the greens well protected by sand bunkers. On the third tee you’re aiming at the Point Vicente Lighthouse, with the next hole overlooking Point Fermin, and the finishing holes along a bluff overlooking the Pacific. The course was designed by Todd Eckenrode and accommodates players of all levels with tees ranging from 50 to 180 yards with a total of 1,239 yards, par 27 from the tips. 

Alternatively, if money is no object, then head over to the Trump National Golf Club on a bench overlooking the Pacific. The course, formerly Pete Dye’s Ocean Trails Golf Club, is a faux links style layout with views of the Pacific from every hole and Catalina Island on a clear day. The broad, undulating fairways are bordered by a variety of conventional, pot, and long waste area sand bunkers filled with crushed marble in addition to multiple water features in play including a 45 foot waterfall on the way to the 17th green. From the tips it’s 7,242 yards, 75.0/146, course/slope ratings with three shorter tees, designed by Tom Fazio.

Shula’s Golf Club in northwest Miami is no longer….

It only took a couple of years since Don Shula’s passing to remove almost all references to his legacy in Miami Lakes. The former Shula’s Golf Club and Resort is now Miami Lakes Golf Club and Hotel. The former Shula’s Steak House is now ML Steaks & Sports. The former Shula’s Athletic Club is now the Miami Lakes Athletic Club. Shula originally became involved in these businesses when he joined the Dolphins in the 1970s by lending his name to the golf club/hotel. Both were originally builtin the early 1960s by the Graham Family, the original developers of the Miami Lakes Community. There are a few reminders of Shula’s presence remaining in the Miami Lakes area as he was among the inaugural class in the Miami Lakes Sports Hall of Fame in 2017 and a plaque in his honor hangs in the clubhouse at Miami Lakes Optimist Park.

The Miami Lakes Golf Club remains a well regarded layout in the Northwest Miami area. while the clubhouse and facilities are a bit dated, the golf course is generally well maintained and rates reasonable for the quality of the layout and the market.  

  • The layout is over level terrain with water hazards on most of the holes along the narrow oak, cypress, and magnolia tree lined fairways with a liberal use of sand traps along the landing zones and guarding the greens. There’s five sets of tees with the tips playing to 6,757 yards, 72.1/127, course/slope ratings, originally designed by Bill Watts in the early 1960s with a redesign by Kipp Schulties.

And, if you plans call for travel throughout the Sunshine State, please use our guide to find the best golf courses and resorts open to public play.

Golf and a Wildlife Tour….Africa you say, nope, another unique Florida attraction

With the recent winter storm systems moving through the Midwest and the Northeast, many are fleeing the frozen north for Florida. A pleasant diversion off I-95 provides for a golf/wildlife tour combination. The White Oak Conservation Foundation is on the banks of St. Mary’s River about thirty miles north of Jacksonville off I-95 to the west a few miles. It’s located on 7,400 acres of preserved land which is home to 30 endangered species including rhino, cheetah, giraffe, and okapi.  and is open for tours.

It’s also home to a 9 hole golf course trekking over level terrain in a scenic, natural setting with 54 different teeing grounds that create 27 distinct holes featuring a signature par 4 with a series of three waterfalls. The layout offers broad fairways bordered by lakes, ponds, and wetlands with an abundance of conventional and long waste area sand traps. There’s three sets of tees with the tips playing to 3,379 yards, 36.0/127, course/slope ratings, designed by Steve Melnyk.

Richmond, VA and I-95

We couldn’t help but think of almost any Interstate highway we’d rather be than the stretch between Richmond and NOVA…especially on January 4, 2022! If you happen to travel this section of highway frequently, or occasionally, it can be literally a 100 mile parking lot depending on the time of day or day of the week.

There is a 3 hour alternative to this madness if you must pass through Richmond on I-95 and if you have your clubs in the trunk. That is pulling off just north of downtown Richmond to experience a classic of golf course architecture restored to nearly its original design, the Belmont Golf Course.

Belmont is a historic layout built in 1917 which held the 1949 PGA Championship won by Sam Snead as well as the Richmond Invitational won by Ben Hogan. It was designed by A. W. Tillinghast(Bethpage? among others) with follow-on consultant work by Donald Ross, and redesigned by Davis Love III in 2020. It’s a hybrid facility where 12 conventional holes from the original #7-#18 holes and a 6-hole short course form the balance. It’s a classic, parkland layout over rolling terrain with a significant amount of fingered sand bunkering defending the fairway landing zones and undulating green complexes with a lake and a creek adding further to the challenge.

A worthy stop on your travels through central Virginia, but also check out the other golf courses and resorts open to public play in our guide here.

Aiken, SC starting to look like a golf destination!

The new “Chalk Mine” 9 hole short course is apparently opening soon near Aiken, SC. Check out this video by Bryan Bros Golf which features the new, okay maybe the first, course record by George Bryan @bryanbrosgolf

While the opening date/rates are yet to be determined, this continues to make a case for Aiken/Augusta as a legitimate golf destination with the Aiken Golf Club, Cedar Creek, Midland Valley, and across the Savannah River, the River Club, and Forest Hills, all with varying levels of architectural pedigree.

With the typically mild winters, reasonable lodging rates, at least when the Masters isn’t on, and plenty of restaurants across the value spectrum, Aiken/Augusta begins to look like a legitimate golf destination.

Be sure to check out our Georgia and South Carolina maps and guides to the best public golf courses in the area.

Southern Pines Golf Club, Pinehurst, North Carolina

Most golf course architectural aficionados are no doubt aware and may have already made the pilgrimage to play the recently restored a 1906 Donald Ross classic in Southern Pines, NC. The course was acquired in 2020 by the owners of Pine Needles/Mid-PInes who promptly commissioned a reawakening of the golf course. It has been faithfully restored by Kyle Franz to Ross’s original intentions, a contemporary so to speak of Pinehurst No. 2 designed in 1907.

As with No.2, Southern Pines featured crowned greens most with false fronts providing a myriad of undulations, and depending on the speed can be mind boggling. The holes were widened, trees removed, the greens surrounds tightly mowed, sand bunkers restored, and the waste areas redefined. The routing moves over undulating, varying terrain providing a host of lies and and angles. It features the “lost hole” and concept that disappeared over he years from Ross’s original design. It was added by Franz as a 140 yard, par 3 bonus holes showcasing a sand green, a look back to golf before the advent of Bermuda greens.

Southern Pines Golf Club

There’s five sets of tees from 4,015 yards to 6,354 yards with the Gold, middle tees playing to 5,724 yards, 67.4/121, course/slope ratings, par of 70. The course reopened to rave reviews in 2021, but spent the year growing in and finalizing some punch list items, but should be ready for the 2022 season.

Many come to Pinehurst to enjoy the Pinehurst Resort and its 9 golf courses, featuring Nos. 2,4,& 8, the five star accommodations, and the restaurants, but there are alternatives like a week playing Tobacco Road, Mid-PInes, Pine Needles, and now Southern Pines. And, if you’re traveling throughout the Tarheel state, use our guide and map to find the best golf courses and resorts to play.