Myrtle Beach Golf:
Breaking down the
Myrtle Beach Golf Scene
By Shane Sharp,
Contributing Writer
Everything you need to know about the packages, the courses,
and all things Grand Strand!
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. If you are having issues encapsulating
all the golf courses of the Grand Strand, you are not alone.
A loose geographic definition has the region spanning a 60-mile
stretch of coastline, from Georgetown, S.C. to Caswell Beach,
N.C.
Many visitors simply refer to the area as Myrtle Beach
an oversimplification that leads to some serious confusion.
Pawleys Island, Surfside Beach, Garden City Beach, Atlantic
Beach, North Myrtle Beach, Little River and Calabash are all
unique enclaves of the region, and each has its own flavor.
Pawleys Island, with its Live Oaks and southern charm, could
be mistaken for the outskirts of Charleston. Atlantic Beach,
with its video game arcades and neon lights, feels like it could
be in the heart of Atlantic City.
And if you end up staying in one burg and golfing in another,
you will find out fast that unlike Pinehurst
or Hilton
Head, you wont get from one end of the Grand Strand
to the other in ten minutes.
Twenty years ago, golfers used to criss cross the region in
search of affordable, quality golf courses. With the beachs
meteoric growth over the past ten years, traffic congestion,
the low density nature of the region, and the limited daylight
of early spring, playing 36 holes of golf in two entirely different
parts of the Strand has become nearly impossible.
No worries: A number of golf packagers offer vacations that
center on one or two subareas of the Grand Strand, and replays
are often based on co-location of golf courses.
But with 120 courses overall, even some of the subareas contain
ten to 20 courses, with offerings ranging from high end daily
fee courses to bottom rung bargains. No need to panic. Peruse
our subarea capsules, arm yourself with the knowledge you need,
and then pull the trigger on a golf vacation that will have
you spending more time on the course, and less time stuck in
traffic.