FLORIDA
FEATURES
On The Road
in Florida:
Classy Golf,
Beach, Fast
Cars,
Await Daytona
Beach Visitors
By David R. Holland,
Senior Writer
DAYTONA BEACH, FL (Dec. 17, 2001) -- Forget for a moment why you came here -- the coastal, world-class golf, the beaches, the 80-degree December days.
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You are atop Ponce de Leon Inlet Lighthouse, the tallest (on its original foundation) guardian of the coast in Florida, and the Space Shuttle Endeavour just blasted off from Cape Canaveral.
Its an awesome sight. The twilight reflects a brilliant fiery glow at lift off. Then the vapor trail is illuminated by the setting sun and suddenly booster separation appears as two twinkles of light falling toward the sea.
Your eyes also gaze upon that immense stretch of Atlantic Ocean beach, where historic races were staged last century by the rich and famous. John D. Rockefeller came here for golf and fast cars. Charles Lindbergh landed a plane on the beach in front of the historic 121-year-old Plaza Resort & Spa.
Vacationers
have been visiting
the Daytona
Beach area for
more than a
century, enjoying
the warm beach
experience,
concerts, boardwalk
amusements and
speed. The first
land speed record
here was a mere
highway crawl
of 57 miles
per hour in
1902.
Louis Chevrolet and Henry Ford discovered Daytona Beach as a perfect place for testing on the gentle slope and hard-packed sand that was 500 yards wide at low tide. But after Sir Malcolm Campbell drove his airplane-engine powered Bluebird at 276 miles per hour in 1935, pioneers in the sport wondered just how safe the sand was and racing on the beach ultimately ceased.
Stock car racers of the South competed on an oval track along the beach near Ponce Inlet and the crowds kept growing. Finally, in 1959, Daytona International Speedway opened.
Today, the Daytona Beach area entertains more than eight million visitors each year and more and more are coming for Florida coastal golf. Heres a capsule look at some of the links opportunities:
The Golf Courses:
LPGA Internationals Champions, Legends Courses
The home of
the LPGA Tour
presents challenging,
affordable and
memorable golf
-- city residents
can play for
as low as $25
at twilight.
The newer Legends Course, designed by Arthur Hills, opened in October 1998, and guides the golfer through testing, target golf, surrounded by tall, dense pines, magnolias and century-old oaks. On this 6,984-yard, par 72, you must be precise on Nos. 10 and 18 -- both are protected in front by dense, heavily-vegetated wetlands. The par-3 beauties at 3 and 7 both require forced carries, as do tee shots on seven total holes from the back tees.
The Champions Course, designed by Rees Jones, opened in July 1994, and is much more forgiving. At 7,088 yards from the back tees, this course does present problems if you get an uneven lie on the strategic mounding, or stray one into the marshy areas or numerous lakes.
Its a links-style design that has hosted The Titleholders Championship, presented by Mercury, one of the LPGA Tour's top events. Its dedicated to such great champions as Kathy Whitworth, Patty Berg, Louise Suggs and Babe Zaharias.
Perhaps the most difficult hole to play for the ladies is No. 13, a 478-yard, par 5, featuring a water carry for the men, but a straightaway, bunkered fairway and water protecting the green from the red tees.
This is a strong par-five test with water and bunkers right, which encourages you to play left for the first two shots, said Michelle McGann, a 7-time winner on the LPGA Tour. A ramped entry to the green allows a bump-and-run approach, avoiding deep bunkers on both sides of the green. If you miss your approach right, you might find the lake.
Champions was the first golf course in history designed for professional women golfers. Golf for Women rated it No. 1 among "America's Best Women-Friendly Golf Courses." The LPGA moved its headquarters here in 1989 from Houston.
LPGA International
Champions and
Legends Courses
300 Champions
Dr
Daytona Beach,
FL 32124
Telephone: 904-274-5742. Internet: www.lpgainternational.com. Green Fees: $65 public, Florida resident, $50. City of Daytona Beach, $40. Twilight after 2 p.m. $30. ProLink GPS System.
Halifax Plantation
Just off the
Old Dixie Highway,
2.6 miles from
the Atlantic
Ocean and surrounded
by Bulow Estate
Park and Tomoka
State Park,
the travel golfer
will find cooling
shade under
the canopy of
100-year-old
oaks and a dandy
traditional
golf course.
Donald Ross
just might cross
your mind numerous
times.
The rolling terrain of Halifax Plantation Golf Club is not only scenic, its very playable. Its a nice change of pace -- just hit the ball in play and you will like your score at the end of the day.
Designed by golf course architect, Bill Amick, the semi-private 7,128-yard , par-72 is tree-lined, has puttable contoured greens and a choice of five elevated tees. Old-style features include fairway bunkers that appear greenside, but in fact, they are 40 yards in front.
The course is located near the ruins of historic Bulow Plantation. Its such an old and historical location I think it was imperative they built an old-style golf course, said Joe Rogers of Little Rock, AR. Even as you turn into the property, the canopy of trees remind you of an old plantation. I love this golf course. Its very playable and a breath of fresh air from some of the really grueling courses that are being built today.
Halifax
Plantation Golf
Club
3400 Halifax
Club House Drive
Ormond Beach,
FL 32174
Telephone: 904-676-9600 or 800-839-4044. Green Fees: Prime season, $40. Off season, $25. Golf Carts $12 per person. Internet: www.halifaxplantation.com.
Ocean Hammock Golf Club
Ocean Hammock
in Palm Coast
was the first
oceanfront golf
course built
in Florida since
Seminole in
1929 and was
recently named
10th best on
Golf Digests
Best New Upscale
Courses list.
Jack Nicklaus 7,201-yard, par-72 beauty is a stern test of golf. Pay attention or face a humiliating high number on your scorecard. Play smart golf and you will be rewarded.
I was amazed at just how tough the golf course was, said Larry Burgess of Dallas. Perhaps the beauty of the place takes your mind off the game, but I kept having a hard time concentrating. Id get ready for a tee shot and Id hear the pounding surf. Then Id look at the GPS and see this waste area to the right of the fairway and water to the left and Id forget to finish my swing favoring the right side. The waste area then would penalize me another stroke.
The one thing Id do is take a mower to the sawpalmettos bordering the fairways on the ocean holes. You just cant really see the ocean. You know it is there, but you need a step ladder to get the view on the ocean holes. But I know that border is there because of environmental restrictions and I dont like it, but I understand it, Burgess said. But put all that aside, this is an outstanding golf course even if there was no ocean at all.
Dubbed the Pebble Beach of the East, Nicklaus says only time will tell whether Ocean Hammock measures up. He says theres no place like the Monterey Peninsula, but he thinks visitors to Ocean Hammock wont forget the golf experience either.
Perhaps the 10 water holes inland will also stay in your memory -- they could be more creative than the six holes that border the Atlantic. The interior fairways are routed through oaks, pines and scrubby dunes, but the fairways are typically wide Nicklaus designs. Prior to construction the terrain was flat, but the dirt and sand used to dig out the lakes was used to put undulations in the fairways.Two of the seaside par 4s are monsters. The ninth is a 468-yarder and the 18th measures 466, part of the Bear Claw that includes 15 through 18. The 15th is another long par-4 at 450 yards going uphill. The 16th is a risk-reward tee shot just daring you to cut off more water than you can and measures 399. The 17th is a 174-yard par 3 that is fronted by water and a huge sand trap.
Nicklaus would like the tract to be a tournament site one day. It definitely would look spectacular on TV with views high above the course on those tall cranes.
Ocean Hammock
Golf Club
200 Hammock
Dunes Parkway
P.O. Box 354489
Palm Coast,
FL 32137
Telephone: 888-515-4579 or 386-446-5584. Green Fees: $175. Internet: www.oceanhammock.com. E-mail: oceanhammock@navi-gator.com. Awards: One of the "Top 10 New Courses You Can Play" by Golf Magazine. One of the "Best New Courses" by Golf Digest. Named a "Modern Classic" by Links Magazine.
Area Golf Course Listings: http://www.golfdaytonabeach.com.
Where to Stay:
Hilton Daytona
Beach Oceanfront
2637 South Atlantic
Daytona Beach,
FL 32118-5643
Telephone:
386-767-7350.
Internet:
http://www.hilton.com/en/hi/hotels/directions.jhtml?ctyhocn=DABHIHF
The Hilton Daytona Beach Oceanfront Resort is located directly on the Atlantic Ocean on the quiet, south end of the East Coast's most famous beach. It is eight miles southeast of Daytona International Airport and two miles north of the A-1-A. The hotel is ideally located near many local attractions including Historic Street.
Plaza Resort
& Spa
600 N. Atlantic
Avenue
Daytona Beach,
FL
Telephone:
904-255-4471
or 800-767-4471.
Internet:
www.plazaresortandspa.com.
Where to Dine:
You cant go wrong with the seafood or steaks at the Chart House at 1100 Marina Point Drive in Daytona Beach. Telephone 904-255-9022. Email them at daytonabeach@char-house.com. Internet: www.chart-house.com/locations/daybeach/index.htm.
For a fun, loud dining experience with huge Italian portions try Buca Di Beppo -- where the Pope dines in Daytona Beach. Check out their web site at www.bucadibeppo.com. Address is 2514 W. International Speedway, telephone 386-253-6523.
If its dinner with the pinky fingered extended you like, try LaCrepe en Haut in Ormond Beach at 142 East Granada Blvd. in Fountain Square. This is elegant gourmet dining but with a mixture of southern hospitality. Telephone: 904-673-1999.
Sights to Behold:
The Ponce de Leon Inlet Lighthouse has a brick foundation 12-feet deep and 45-feet wide and soars to 175 feet, one of the tallest brick lighthouses in the nation. Built in 1887, the tower is 32 feet in diameter at the base and tapers to 12 1/2 feet at the top. The brick walls are eight-feet thick at the bottom and 1 1/2-feet thick at the top. One and a quarter million bricks were used to build the lighthouse, and the work took more than four years to complete. www.ponceinlet.org.
For NASCAR fans,
a trip here
wouldnt
be complete
without a visit
to Daytona USA.
a one-of-kind
interactive
motorsports
attraction,
which features
a variety of
hands-on activities
featuring both
advanced technology
and historical
elements. (www.daytonausa.com)
Daytona Beach Convention and Visitors Bureau: Log on to www.daytonabeach.com or www.daytonabeachcvb.org to get all the info you need for a trip to this world-famous beach city. Telephone them at 386-255-0415.
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