volume 13:

Rothesay Golf Club

Tracks Less Taken

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There are courses that reveal themselves slowly. Others leave their mark with every step.

Perched high above the town on the Isle of Bute, Rothesay Golf Club occupies the slopes of Canada Hill, where the landscape rises sharply from the Firth of Clyde. Reached by a short ferry crossing from the mainland, the journey feels like a transition into a different pace of golf. Designed by James Braid and Ben Sayers, the course circles the hillside, using the natural contours to create a routing where elevation becomes both its defining characteristic and greatest defence.

The climb shapes everything. Fairways rise and fall across the hillside, demanding thoughtful club selection and rewarding commitment with expansive views across the Firth of Clyde towards the Isle of Arran.

Dry stone walls thread their way through the course, acting as both boundary and hazard, while the ever-changing terrain ensures that no two holes ask quite the same question. Rothesay is less about overpowering a golf course and more about understanding the land beneath your feet.

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In many places, the landscape feels untouched, as though the course has simply settled into the hillside rather than being carved from it. The routing embraces the island's natural movement, allowing each hole to borrow from the contours that have existed for centuries. It is golf that feels inseparable from its surroundings.

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Course Reel

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What makes Rothesay memorable is not simply its elevation, but the perspective it offers. From the highest points, the town falls quietly below, ferries trace their way across the water, and the mountains of Arran dominate the western horizon. It is a course where the scenery is never a distraction from the golf, but part of the experience itself.

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Course Details

  • Designer: James Braid & Ben Sayers
  • Established: 1892
  • Par: 69
  • Yardage: 5,491 yards
  • Location: Isle of Bute
  • 55°50′54″N 5°03′24″W

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