The Witch Golf Course was carved out of trees and swampland just slightly west of Myrtle Beach. It is just off the 501, which is the main route into town.
The Witch is open to the public and enjoys Tift Dwarf grass on the greens and 419 Bermuda grass on the fairways. Thanks to the weather in South Carolina, the course is open year-round. The distance of the course is 6,796 yards from the black tees, and the slope is 133.
Myrtle Beach is home to a Witch that has been casting a spell on golfers for years, and the reasons are many. The Witch Golf Links offers one of the Myrtle Beach's most interesting and underrated golfing experiences.
The Witch Golf Course was carved out of trees and swampland just slightly west of Myrtle Beach. It is just off the 501, which is the main route into town. It is said to have over 4000 feet of bridge connecting the various holes. After finishing on 18, I wondered if there might actually be more than 4000 feet of bridge.
Claude Pardue, President of D.G. Golf Management, which owns and operates the Conway, S.C. club, said flooding that has plagued its golf course for several years has made it “impossible to operate it properly and successfully.” The 32-year-old course will close on November 21 if a sale to R.S.
Vern MorcomOriginally built as a nine-hole layout, Sandringham was expanded to 18 in the 1950s by Vern Morcom, the long-time superintendent at Kingston Heath who also worked alongside his father Mick, who was responsible for constructing many of Alister MacKenzie's Australian designs.
November 21Meanwhile, November 21 has been pegged as the last day in the lifespan of The Witch Golf Links, a Dan Maples design that opened in 1989.
It is believed that the Palmetto Golf Club is the oldest continually-operating 18-hole golf course in the Southeast that is still in its original location. Palmetto Golf Club could also be the second oldest golf club in the United States as well.
You play 3 rounds of golf (18 holes). You score your round doing your best not to break any rules (see this FAQ for more detail https://futuregolf.com.au/faq/get-handicap/. You submit your scorecards via your Future Golf member portal.
The 6,800-yard, par-71 course opened in 1989 and is owned and operated by D.G. Golf Management, of which Pardue is the president.
With more than 350 golf courses to choose from, the SC Golf Course Ratings Panel has compiled a list of the top 30 places to tee off in the Palmetto State.
Both Cinnamon Hill and White Witch Golf Course are members of the Rose Hall family. Typically, in the “Annie's Revenge” tournament format, the courses are played once each in the three-day event. However, White Witch is currently closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Alister MacKenzie gets credit for most of the design work that makes Palmetto what it is today. He made the 20-mile trip to Palmetto in 1932, shortly after building the layout for Augusta National. He was hired to change the sand greens to grass and to lengthen the course.
The first golf course in the United States was Oakhurst Links, built in 1884 in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia. It was originally a six hole track which was later expanded to nine holes. Oakhurst was the first course and golf club in the United States.
Pine Lakes Country ClubThe oldest existing course in Myrtle Beach, built in 1927 and having undergone a total restoration in 2009, is Pine Lakes Country Club; fittingly located almost in the exact center of the Strand.
All at once, Bay Tree's 54 holes - the Green, Silver and Golf Courses - shuttered, ostensibly to clear the way for housing in its advantageous North Myrtle Beach location. But the Great Recession happened, and the property sat untouched until 2017, when homes began to be built there in earnest.
This relatively short-lived course, laid out by Rees Jones, was owned by the Tilghman family, namely North Myrtle Beach mayor Phil Tilghman, who served the city from 1988 to 2001. His daughter, Kelly, was a longtime Golf Channel correspondent.
Considered one of the Myrtle Beach area's premium courses, with peak-season rates topping $100, it was a surprise when this 27-hole Clyde Johnston layout near the North Carolina/South Carolina border shuttered. As its name suggested, the design was meant to be a nod to British heathland golf.
Anyone driving up the southern part of the Grand Strand would have passed by Indian Wells repeatedly, with its large sign advertising always-reasonable morning and afternoon rates. Even though the course boasted water in play on 16 of 18 holes, it was surprisingly playable and not overly long.
This Dan Maples design had one of the best natural settings of any Myrtle Beach-area golf course: a large, unspoiled tract with hundreds of yards of marsh frontage, straddling the border between the Carolinas.
One of the original 20 or so courses developed in the Myrtle Beach area, Possum Trot closed up after 51 years, over which time it built a reputation as one of the region's more playable and friendly golf courses.
This 27-hole Robert Trent Jones, Sr. design, originally called Skyway Golf Club, delighted golfers for decades with a not-too-onerous challenge and some scenic holes along the Intracoastal Waterway. Its main claim to fame, however, was its unique method of conveyance from the parking lot, across the Waterway to the clubhouse: a suspended gondola.
Witch Golf Club. Myrtle Beach is home to a Witch that has been casting a spell on golfers for years, and the reasons are many. The Witch Golf Links offers one of the Myrtle Beach's most interesting and underrated golfing experiences. The front nine plays through a cypress swamp, bringing golfers on a tour of the Lowcountry.
The back nine moves from the Lowcountry to something that feels more like mountain golf. The 16th, 17th and 18th holes feature uncommon natural elevation that presents a different challenge, invigorating golfers as they near the end of the day.
Nice golf course, unlike some in the area, The Witch is very green. Not a big fan of the Bermuda greens (not Witch's greens, any Bermuda greens) but they are smooth with very few pitch marks. The course has real nice hole variation and with the exception of hole 12 you feel like you're the only people on the golf course.
Winding through deep, dark, spooky woods and along a dark and scary swamp rests one of the most notorious courses in the area. The Witch golf club is sure to challenge you. The undisturbed deep southern swamp layout is home to many head-scratching holes and intriguing wildlife.
3 Nights & 3 Rounds of golf! Courses include: Man O’ War, The Witch and The Wizard