It feels like a lifetime ago when I first heard of Ballyliffin, a mystical links at the very top of Ireland in County Donegal where there is much great golf to be found. A friend waxed lyrical about its beauty and its 36 holes. That it was so close to Malin Head, the northernmost tip of the country, only added to the allure. This is the wild north, where the ocean roars louder and the Aurora Borealis ripples above the horizon.
The 6th green on Ballyliffin’s Glashedy Links at sunrise
(Image credit: Kevin Markham)
One of the club’s great joys is possessing two links layouts that share the same land but are of different persuasions. The Pat Ruddy-designed Glashedy is big and muscular, and sways like the rhythm of the tide, while the Old course teases more out of your game and entertains with an old-school bump-and-run groove.
A trip into the heart of the Inishowen Peninsula takes you to the village of Ballyliffin from where glimpses of the dunes stretch out to sea, and Glashedy Rock stamps its presence in deeper waters. It is a striking sight, as is the clubhouse which sits proud in the low-lying dunes, surrounded by golf holes. (There’s a nine-hole par-3 course here, too.)
Rumpled links terrain abounds on the two 18-hole courses at Ballyliffin
(Image credit: Kevin Markham)
A big course for the big occasion
Ballyliffin’s Glashedy Links hosted the Irish Open in 2018, and the Amateur Championship in 2024. That tells you its scale and quality. It also emphasises the sort of challenge it can present to the humble amateur.
The view out to see from the 14th tee on the Glashedy Links at Ballyliffin
(Image credit: Kevin Markham)
Bunkering is voracious, hiding low in pools of shadow, especially around greens. You will quickly learn that to succeed here your approach play must be excellent. Greens are big but slopes around the edges can be treacherous, tugging balls towards sandy depths. The clever routing sees each loop of nine returning to the clubhouse, with both visiting the biggest dunes in one corner of the course.
This is when you’ll appreciate the grand scale of the place, especially on the par-3 5th, which hits down towards Glashedy Rock, and the par-3 7th which plays from the highest point in the dunes to a green far below, squeezed up against a pond. It is yet another par-3, the 14th, that might just steal the plaudits for best hole as, once again, you hit down from the high dunes, playing towards the sea, to a shallow, wide green. The swells…
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