The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Blue Ridge retreat:

The remote Primland resort offers a state-of-the-art lodge and golf course that teeter on the edge of the ridge line in some spots, giving the feeling you’re golfing on top of the world.

- By Blake Guthrie For the AJC

The 12,000-acre Primland resort in Virginia’s mountains is like a country apart.

the world’s most renowned courses, touts the golfing at Primland for its “deep immersion in nature,” saying, “it’s a course not designed to sell fairway homes, but for the pure experience of golf. Aesthetica­lly and athletical­ly, it doesn’t disappoint.”

It’s a remote place, in the wilderness up winding twolane roads where bear crossing signs are common. But don’t let the wilderness part fool you. Primland is a highend resort, with a state-of-theart lodge adjacent to the golf course. It’s the kind of place where you’re not allowed to park your own car or get your own ice from the ice machine. They have someone to do that for you. And the lodge rooms have one-touch buttons by the bed to open and close the blinds and provide mood lighting at any time of day. Plenty of other activities besides golf are offered for guests — hunting, horseback riding, shooting clays, Geo-caching, hiking, ATV tours and a full-service spa — but one notable attraction is the observato- ry attached to the main lodge building. Disguised as a grain silo, the observator­y contains a high-tech, 14-inch camera telescope that collects light from the nighttime sky in seconds-long intervals to provide images that can’t be seen with the naked eye or even through the eyepiece of the scope in real time. The lack of light pollution at this altitude, away from population centers, makes Primland a perfect spot for this kind of stargazing. A resort with a resident astronomy staff is a rare thing. The Tour of the Universe program begins with a field lesson about the constellat­ions and ends up in the observator­y dome, which rotates in sync with the telescope to gaze upon stars, cloud nebulae and spiral galaxies light years away as they come into view on clear nights above the Appalachia­ns.

For a golf retreat that literally rises above and beyond what you’re used to in the Southeast, Primland does the trick nicely.

A 12,000-acre resort — nearly the size of Bermuda — Primland is in the Blue Ridge Mountains of southwest Virginia, set far away from cities and towns.

The name comes from the resort’s founder, Didier Primat, a French-born businessma­n and environmen­talist who purchased the land in 1976 and turned it into a preserve and hunting retreat. Golf entered the picture with the opening of the aptly named Highland Course in 2006, located on top of a mountain plateau a few miles from the Blue Ridge Parkway. Designed by acclaimed British golf course architect Donald Steel, the course teeters on the edge of the ridge line at certain points, offering stunning views of the river gorge and surroundin­g mountain peaks. While many high-altitude courses are cradled in mountain valleys, at Primland the valleys are below, making it feel like you’re golfing on top of the world. Imagine playing links around the rim of the Grand Canyon, only the canyon is filled with trees.

Shortly after its opening, Golf Digest named the Highland Course as the best new public golf course in America in the $75 and over category, referring to it as an “isolated corner of the golf universe.”

Award-winning golf writer James Dodson, author of “American Triumvirat­e: Sam Snead, Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan, and the Modern Age of Golf,” calls Primland “one of the best golfing experience­s going right now,” and says of the Highland Course, “it’s the most rewarding modern course I’ve seen.” Dodson, who has played many of

 ?? BLAKE GUTHRIE / FOR THE AJC ?? The fairway offers a beautiful view of the main lodge building at Primland resort in the Blue Ridge Mountains of southwest Virginia.
BLAKE GUTHRIE / FOR THE AJC The fairway offers a beautiful view of the main lodge building at Primland resort in the Blue Ridge Mountains of southwest Virginia.
 ?? BLAKE GUTHRIE / FOR THE AJC ?? Guests at Primland often stop to admire the view. For golfers, tee times are spaced so no one feels rushed on the course.
BLAKE GUTHRIE / FOR THE AJC Guests at Primland often stop to admire the view. For golfers, tee times are spaced so no one feels rushed on the course.
 ?? PRIMLAND ?? The observator­y at Primland contains a 14-inch camera telescope that can find stellar objects in the nighttime sky.
PRIMLAND The observator­y at Primland contains a 14-inch camera telescope that can find stellar objects in the nighttime sky.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States