Ebla Cham Palace Hotel, Syria: The golf course at the Ebla Cham Palace Hotel in the Syrian capital of Damascus remains open despite the widespread violence that has engulfed the country as open rebellion against President Bashar al-Assad has given way to civil war.
Abbottabad Golf Club, Pakistan: Abbottabad Golf Club, also known as Piffer Golf Club, is located about 1.5 miles away from the compound where al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed in a covert operation undertaken by SEAL Team Six in May of 2011.
Pyongyang Golf Course, North Korea: Oppressive regime. Impressive course record. Think getting into the country is tough? Try besting the score of Kim Jong Il, the Hermit Kingdom’s late Dear Leader, who is said to have shot a 34-under 38 in the one and only round he ever played. Over 18 holes, in 1994, he reportedly notched 11 holes-in-one. The feat grows all the more astounding once you see the venue. Tight and tree-lined, with fairways flanked by ledges that drop into oblivion, this is a fittingly penal layout. But straying out-of-bounds is nothing compared to what awaits if you attempt to excercise free speech.
Hans Merensky Golf Course, South Africa: When people here refer to a scary 15-footer, odds are they're not describing a lengthy putt. Cut through Kruger National Park, this course counts giant crocodiles among its hazards. As you go about your round, look for baby springbok dangling from the trees. Leopards leave them hanging. Hippos yawn in the greenside ponds. Though injuries are rare, fatalities have happened. In 1998, a bull elephant stomped to death a golfer on the 16th green.
Hans Merensky Golf Course, South Africa: This quirky course is part golf, part wildlife safari.
Uummannaq Golf Course, Greenland: A cold streak can hit you on any golf course. Hypothermia is something else. The northern-most layout on the planet, Uummannaq plays host to the World Snow Golf Championships, which more closely resembles an ice fishing expedition. Collared shirts and shorts? Try thermals and down parkas, in temperatures that drop as far as 30-below.
Merapi Golf Course, Indonesia: That shaking in your hands could be first tee jitters. But it also might be brought on by Mt. Merapi, an active volcano that looms over this otherwise placid 18. Several eruptions have occurred in recent years, including a disaster in 2010 in which ash, smoke and lava flow caused more than 350 deaths.
Kabul Golf Club, Afghanistan: If golf seems trivial in a war-torn nation, don’t tell that to Mohammad Afzal Abdul, owner, operator and head pro at this bare-bones five-hole course outside the Afghan capital. Given the risks (Abdul’s brother, Khan, was murdered by the Taliban for his association with foreigners), not many people play it. But those who do are rewarded with much more than a been-there-done-that story. They get to see the sand-green course for what it really is: a hope-filled project in a ravaged land.
Kabul Golf Club, Afghanistan: “I won’t close it,” Abdul told The New York Times in 2007. “I’ll be patient. People need to play golf.”
Nullarbor Links, Australia: Looking for the cart girl? Bad news is, there is none. Good news is, it’s just a 90 mile walk to the next tee. That’s the longest haul between holes on the Nullarbor Links, which runs 848 miles across the Australian Outback, a wildly remote region that happens to be home to some of the world’s deadliest snakes. On the downside, one bite from a death adder can kill a cow in minutes. On the upside, there’s lots of room to run on a landscape so expansive and sparsely populated that when SkyLab fell here, no one got hurt.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου