Posts Tagged ‘Miniature Golf’

Building the Right Miniature Golf Course

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

A great and fun activity that you can enjoy from the comfort of your own backyard is miniature golf. Mini golf is a great and fun game for the whole family, and you don’t need to go to a mini golf course and pay to play when you can learn building the right miniature golf course for yourself. Building a mini golf course isn’t that hard, and once you’re done you’ll be able to play a quick and fun game with your loved ones. The first thing that you’ll need to do is look at your backyard or wherever you’re planning to put the golf course. Try to see how much land you have to build your course in so that you know what you have to work with.

Obstacles make the game a lot more fun, so choose ones that will make the game more interesting and complicated, but not too hard that it’s discouraging. Some great obstacles include ramps and pipes. If you’re willing to build and construct a great course, then you can even make moving obstacles to increase the level of challenge for your future mini golf players. The next thing you’ll need to do is find out what kind of supplies you will need to use. You will need some PVC pipes for the pipes in the course, bags of sand, siding materials, planks for ramps, and other things that you’d like to include in your mini golf course.

Make a list of these things and buy them in a hardware store. It’s a good idea to buy extra materials so that if ever something gets broken you can fix it or replace it easily and quickly. Once you’ve got your supplies, you can start to build your course. If you made a plan ahead, then you’ll be able to easily build your course exactly the way you want it. You can move around obstacles and holes if they end up being too close and just change your plans a little bit. When you’re done making the course, you can bring in the friends or family to see it and help you make any necessary changes to it.

Play a few rounds and keep score. This is so that the average score will set the par for the holes, to make the game fair. By following these steps, you now know the basics of building the right miniature golf course. Once you’re done with this, you should have a great golf course to spend many afternoons having fun in.

Best Luxury Hotels For Golfers

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Luxury hotels for golfers can be found the world over and for those who are golf addicts a round of golf adds a pleasant dimension to any hotel stay. Here are some of the most prestigious golf courses on three different continents, each with their own luxury hotels for golfers right on site.

Luxury Golf Hotels in Europe
For those looking for five-star hotels with golf courses in Europe, your journey has to take you to Scotland, where the game was first played around 600 years ago on the Old Course at St Andrews. In the same area is the “Palace in the Glen”, Gleneagles, known as one of the top luxury hotels for golfers in Scotland with its three top championship golf courses including the famous King’s Course, the more secluded Queen’s Course and the PGA Centenary Course – the proposed venue for the 2014 Ryder Cup.

Luxury Golf Hotels in North America
The Phoenician in Scottsdale, AZ is hard to beat as one of the top luxury hotels in the USA with Five Diamond accommodation and every possible amenity. The 27-hole Championship golf course challenges guests to many happy hours of extraordinary play in this green oasis surrounded by the rugged Sonoran desert landscape.

During the winter months, many avid golfers head out to Hawaii to one of the superb luxury hotels for golfers. The Four Seasons Resort Hualalai at historic Ka’upulehu has a splendid Jack Nicklaus signature golf course, and playing in the sunshine is a given. For non-golfing partners there is a newly expanded spa and a superb beachfront location.

Luxury Golf Hotels in Asia
Golfers visiting Tokyo will find luxury hotels galore but due to the lack of space, none have their own golf courses. Golf is so prestigious in Japan that membership can cost around $3 million, and then only if you are Japanese of the highest social standing. The good news for golfers is that the par-72 Kazusa Monarch Country Club does welcome non-Japanese visitors to its Jack Nicklaus designed golf course. The green fees are in the region of Y15,000 to Y23,000 (US$160-250) but they do include a caddy and complimentary drinks.

Luxury hotels in Tokyo are easier to find. The Grand Hyatt has splendid views of Tokyo city and is close to the Ginza shopping district, or choose the quieter rural retreat of the Niki-Club, set amidst the forest of Tochigi-Ken. All luxury hotels in Tokyo offer superb standards of service which the Asians do so beautifully.

Alex Brey co-founded Luxique, and has had a passion for travel for more than 20 years. So much so, he convinced others to join him in his pursuit to create a travel documentary highlighting some of the globe’s finest destinations. During an almost three year process, he got to stay in some outstanding luxury hotels, soak up some vibrant cultures and enjoy some of the world’s finest cuisines. He realized that the decision-making process for planning the perfect trip – from choosing the destination to getting the right hotel room – was something that could be improved. And so came the birth of Luxique, the website that caters for the discerning traveler.