Portuguese
Golf Mecca: Lisbon and Surrounds
By Carla
Harvey, Staff Writer
Golf awards within the golf tourism industry last year targeted
Portugal in their top six established golf destinations in the
world, with both the Algarve and Lisbon counted among the first
half dozen. It is expected that northern Portugal will soon be
included. Cooler and quieter than the Algarve and southern Spain,
the courses in central and northern Portugal were a pleasure to
explore during a recent summertime golfing jaunt.
My trip was just as much about getting the feel of this country as it was about playing golf in it. Let me dispel a belief that may be held by the uninitiated: Portugal is not Spain. Ive been to Spain, so why should I make the effort? is as reasonable an argument as omitting Africa. Next door to each other they are; the same, they are not.
|
Penha Longa Golf
Resort, first golf call, is some 600 kilometres from home base. As I preferred to face this impeccable course as homo erectus rather than crawling around it on all fours, I opted for an overnight stop at a manor house close to a city worth seeing. Évora, on UNESCOs World Heritage List, is a walled city whose up and down fortunes through the centuries are well documented by the ruins therein. It is an attractive, relaxed city and the Alentejos (Portugals plain area) main attraction.
Nearby, Monte de Chora Cascas is a series of havens from the humdrum
with no obligation to do anything but enjoy your surroundings.
From the quiet alto saxophone filling a room with soulful sounds
to the rooms division into peaceful corners, Monte de Chora Cascas
is a statement of tranquillity. With a wonderful swimming pool
from which to watch the sunrise and the cheerful hospitality of
an intelligent hostess, the pre-Penha Longa rest stop could not
have been better.
Penha Longa Golf Club is a delight to the eye: undulating, as richly green as emeralds and surrounded by cool, cool water. The course is justifiably considered an oasis - a river on one side and the Atlantic on the other. Additional inherent attributes include Penha Longas location within the confines of the Sintra-Cascais Natural Park.
Robert Trent Jones Jr. has designed only two courses in Portugal: they are the Atlantic and Monastery courses at Penha Longa. The 18-hole Atlantic has hosted numerous tournaments, among which the Portuguese Open figures twice. It is rated No. 32 in continental Europe by Golf World. The nine-hole Monastery course complements it perfectly.
|
The course begins with four Par 4 holes, allowing you to ease into your game. Pine trees and eucalyptus trees on a half dozen holes (1,2,3 and 16,17,18) make accuracy a must. Number 6, Penha Longas signature hole, is a beautiful hole with a Roman aqueduct as part of its attractions. It is listed among the best 500 in the world. Not to forget your game while admiring the layout: spacious bunkers are in abundance and a large lake waits serenely to the left of the green.
Hole 16 is the most demanding of skills and is recognised as a great hole by even those it has thwarted: the tee is elevated, the fairway slopes uphill towards the green; and hazards lay to both left and right.
Facilities include two putting greens, driving range and a neat
pitch set up. All of these are well out of the public eye and
ideal for some concentrated warm up. Caesar Park Hotel forms part
of Penha Longa Resort. It is listed as one of Leading Hotels of
the World.
Contact details & Green Fees
Penha Longa Golf Club 18 holes & 9 holes
Estrada da Lagoa Azul
Linhó
Tel: 219 249 011, Fax: 219 249 024
e-mail: golf@caesarparkpenhalonga.com
www.caesarparkpenhalonga.com
Quinta Do Conde is set spectacularly on top of the highest hill in Colares, and only 10 minutes away from the magnificent city of Sintra. That is but one of its distinguishing features. Another is that the garden plays host to the only pecan tree in Portugal - an immense and noble tree, to say the least. This manor house is also unique in that its is owners are English.
The Quinta do Conde house is 350 years old and was originally
owned by a Duke whose coat of arms has not yet been identified.
When the 0Neills bought the home, it was in need of extensive
renovation. Fifty local men worked on it and within six months,
the doors were opened to guests.
Eight double rooms are available; there is room for an additional six when owners expand. Four-poster beds grace four of the rooms, which are one of several English touches that make this house special. English teas in the afternoons are another. What a lovely thing to do after golf and sundowners. Watching the sun go down at Quinta do Conde is, by the way, in a class of its own. The swimming pool at the far end of a lush garden, overlooks the plains below; an exceptionally good breakfast is served there or in a comfortably ornate room indoors. Other amenities include an attractive library and satellite TV.
|
Leaving the Lisbon-Sintra area, I headed north in the direction of Amarante Golf and the Casa de Juste. The drive of 400 kilometres was rendered painless by excellent roads and balmy weather.
Information about manor houses and booking can be found at http://www.manorhouses.com
Read more about Portugal golf in Part 2 of our special three-part series!












