China 's Beach |
From March 2007 by Alex Jenkins |
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14th Hole |
Stand on the first tee at Tiger Beach Golf Links and prepare to briefly lose the ability to speak. The view from this tricky par four, one of the highest points on the course, is awe-inspiring: rough sand dunes covered in wild fescue, rumpled fairways punctuated by seemingly inescapable pot bunkers, ocean waves crashing over a sandy stretch of beach in the distance-goats can even be seen grazing in the tangled rough. Then there's the wind, hammering off the sea on my visit in November, with the flagsticks fighting a losing battle to remain upright, and the temperature, which had the nifty thermometer on my newfangled wristwatch reading forty-six degrees Fahrenheit. My playing partner, Brad Shih, the club's amiable executive vice president, understood my befuddlement. "Just like Scotland , right," he said, his inflection indicating he meant it as a statement, not a question. "It's more Scottish than Scotland ," I replied in all seriousness before scuttling a weak drive down the fairway. |
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13th Hole |
| The extraordinary result of Soong's endeavors went pretty much unnoticed until members of a delegation from Angus , Scotland , visiting the region on a cultural exchange, took a break from their civic duties and ventured to Tiger Beach . Upon their return, word spread to venerable Carnoustie, Angus's most renowned links, whose leaders dispatched their own representatives to take a look. "They couldn't believe that such a course could exist in China ," remembers Shih with a chuckle. "They said they felt like they were at home back in Scotland ." |
| 2008???? |