
Remarkable Golf Travel
The courses. The rooms.
The trip worth taking.
The trip starts with your group — the handicaps, the pace, the evenings. Thirty years of trips from Pebble to Pinehurst means we know how to build it.
The right trip for your group might already exist — a tour operator’s package, booked at our rate with the amenities arranged. It might need to be built from scratch. The only way to know for sure is the first conversation.
We listen first. A single-digit handicap on a buddy trip and a ten-handicap with his wife are different itineraries — different courses, different tees, different evenings. The first conversation is the most important one.
Then we plan the rounds the way you actually play them. Tee-time spacing. Caddie pairing. Walking versus carts. Where you’re eating after the 18th. Whether anyone actually wants to play 36 on day three. Tour operators sell the same answer to everyone. We don’t.
The buddies trip, the couples trip, the round you’ve been talking about for years.
i.
The Buddies Trip
Four golfers or twelve. Tee-time choreography, ground transport, a dinner reservation that holds when the back nine runs long. The logistics that turn a good group trip into one worth repeating.
ii.
The Couples Trip
One plays, the other explores — or both play. We build the itinerary so neither person is waiting on the other. Golf in the morning, somewhere worth being in the afternoon.
iii.
The Bucket-list Round
The Old Course. Pebble Beach. The Ocean Course at Kiawah. Ballybunion on a clear day. The rounds you’ve been talking about for years. We know the tee times, the caddies, and the hotel worth staying in after.
iv.
I Don’t Know Where Yet
You know the vibe — links golf, warm weather, walking only. You don’t know the destination. Tell us the group, the pace, and what kind of golf you’re after. We’ll build the short list.
If you know where you want to play, we’ll build the trip around it. If you don’t, that’s exactly what the first call is for.
Begin PlanningA few we can build together.
01CaliforniaPebble Beach
The 18th along the Pacific. Caddies, The Lodge, drinks around the fire pits at Spanish Bay while the bagpiper plays.
Sample itinerary
02North CarolinaPinehurst
Eleven courses on one property. Everyone comes for No. 2 — don’t sleep on No. 4.
Sample itinerary
03FloridaStreamsong
Walking only, all winter. Red, Blue, and Black — three architects, three very different rounds.
Sample itinerary
04WisconsinKohler · Wisconsin
Whistling Straits, Black Wolf Run, Erin Hills. The upper Midwest’s case that great golf doesn’t require an ocean.
Sample itinerary
05Links golfIreland
Old Head above Kinsale, Lahinch, Ballybunion, Waterville, Doonbeg. A week of links golf with the right group, in a country that knows how to host one.
Sample itinerary
06Links golfScotland
The Old Course, Carnoustie, Kingsbarns, North Berwick. The ballot, the caddies, the rounds you tell stories about for years.
Sample itinerary
07South CarolinaKiawah Island
The Ocean Course on a barrier island, nothing between it and the Atlantic. The wind is the fourth scorecard — and four more courses mean you have good reason to stay.
Sample itinerary
08South CarolinaHilton Head
Harbour Town Golf Links on the marsh, Pete Dye's lighthouse at 18, the RBC Heritage in April. A golf island that has been doing this seriously for fifty years and hasn't lost the thread.
Sample itinerary
09Palm Beach, FloridaPGA National
The Champion course and the Bear Trap — holes 15, 16, and 17 that have ended more tournament rounds than anyone can count. Winter golf with teeth.
Sample itinerary
10Casa de CampoDominican Republic
The best golf in the Caribbean — three Pete Dye courses at Casa de Campo, the coral coastline, and the kind of weather that makes a February tee time feel like a very good decision.
Sample itinerary
11Palm Desert, CaliforniaPGA West
The Stadium Course, Alcatraz at 17, and a valley with more courses than you can play in a week. The Coachella Valley in January is its own argument for going.
Sample itinerary
12Oregon CoastBandon Dunes
Five courses built into the dunes above the Oregon coast. Walking only, wind always a factor. The new links golf destination.
Sample itinerary
Having never planned a golf trip, I was unsure of many things. Peter had both firm answers and valued suggestions — from group dynamics to courses to hotels.
From start to finish the entire trip was seamless. Everyone in the group loved it — all parts of the trip were Class A.
Peter nails every detail; from accommodations to tee times to transportation and dining reservations, it's all taken care of.
Everything was set up ahead of time, no detail was missed. His planning let us focus on having fun and hitting the occasional good shot.
Now booking 2026 & 2027
Tell us where you want to play — or ask us where you should.
Tell us about the trip you have in mind.