Global Traveler Special

Tee Time in Port

Dedicated golf cruises offer an easy way to play the world’s courses.

- Royal Portrush Golf Club in Ireland BY DALE LEATHERMAN

All cruise companies offer an almost irresistib­le promise: Unpack once and visit multiple destinatio­ns, waking every morning in a different place. Many cruises give a nod to golf, featuring putting greens, simulators and golf outings. But only on a dedicated golf cruise can you get an itinerary where playing notable courses is the raison d’être, and you don’t have to touch your golf bag until the practice range or first tee. Tee times and transporta­tion — even club cleaning — are taken care of.

Two of the biggest providers of golf cruises are Perry Golf and Kalos Golf Cruises.

“Golf cruises are a relatively unknown style of golf vacation, but they’re convenient, with high service levels and unique experience­s — and the increasing demand is a function of satisfied and loyal clientele,” said Gordon Dalgleish, president and cofounder, Perry Golf. “Some of our 2024 cruises have wait lists, and we are booking into 2025.”

“Golf cruises are popular because they provide a ‘country club at sea’ atmosphere,” said Jim Lamont, president, Kalos Golf Cruises. “There is camaraderi­e on the ship, good service, and no need to unpack and repack. On typical golf trips, golfers arrive at a new hotel after a round of golf and have to figure out where to go for dinner, where to park, etc.

Our guests have all done those trips but don’t want the hassles. They want ease of travel and to focus on golf.”

Perry Golf partners exclusivel­y with four luxury Azamara ships, each one carrying just under 700 guests. Cruises in 2024/2025 include 25-plus countries and more than 80 courses, 20 of which Golf Digest ranked in the World’s Top 100. For instance, the six rounds on the New Zealand/ Australia cruise include Kauri Cliffs, Cape Kidnappers and The Kinloch Club. Summer cruises in the British Isles feature Royal Dornach and Ailsa Turnberry in Scotland and Royal County Down, Royal Portrush and Ballyunion in Ireland. Some cruises feature attendance at The Open. Other destinatio­ns include South Africa, the Mediterran­ean, Norway, Asia, the Baltic Sea and the Arabian Gulf.

“Our golf cruise clients are primarily couples, and the geographic demand is fairly well-distribute­d,” said Dalgleish. He added in most cases cruise decisions are based as much (or more) on the destinatio­n as the courses on the itinerary.

Destinatio­n decisions are influenced by non-golfing spouses who expect all the usual cruising perks, including interestin­g excursions in ports of call. And golfers have other interests, too.

“We sense that our golfers want more than golf,” said Lamont. “They

have other travel interests, be it food and wine, history, learning about other cultures, etc. Each of our cruises offers a different twist.”

Among the trips with a twist are the Bordeaux Golf & Wine Cruise and the Normandy Golf Cruise, which traces the Allied invasion of France.

Kalos Golf caters to golfers seeking an exclusive small-ship (90–120 passengers) experience. The company charters luxury ships such as Sea Cloud Spirit and Sea Cloud II, which combine the exotic atmosphere of a windjammer with modern convenienc­es. Another impressive vessel is Emerald Azzurra, a sleek, modern yacht accommodat­ing 100 passengers and 68 crew members. The smaller ocean-going ships allow Kalos to get into harbors not accessible by larger ships. For river cruising, Kalos uses ships in the posh AmaWaterwa­ys fleet. And the company is adept at securing tee times at private clubs such as Valderrama Golf Club in Spain. Kalos itinerarie­s include the British Isles, the Adriatic, Australia, Spain, Normandy, New Zealand,

Sicily and the Riviera, as well as the Danube and Rhine rivers.

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