| Year
Built |
1994 |
| Designer |
Mike Strantz |
| Dress
Code |
No denim,
collared shirt and bermuda shorts required |
| Metal Spikes |
Not Allowed |
| Earliest
Tee Time |
7:00 AM |
| Greens |
Champion Bermuda Grass |
| Fairways |
Bermuda Grass |
| Number of Sand Bunkers |
71 |
| Water
Hazards in Play |
Yes |
| Greens Aerated |
May-August |
| Overseeding
Schedule |
September/Open |
| Walking the Golf Course |
Not Allowed |
| Driving
Range |
No |
| Additional
Facilities |
Putting Green,
Sand and Chipping Area |
| Food
Availability |
Beverage cart,
snack bar, restaurant |
| Bar |
Full service
bar |
|
Golf Course Comments |
| This golf course is
located on the site of a former rice plantation bordering the
Waccamaw River, and was later turned into an exclusive fishing
and hunting preserve. The name Caledonia comes from the Plantation’s
original founder, Dr. Robert Nesbit, a Scottish immigrant, who
acquired the property with his marriage to Elizabeth Pawley,
after whose family Pawley's Island is named. The golf course is extremely
scenic and home to an abundance of wildlife. The fairways are
wide open, and the greens are large and undulating. Water hazards
come into play on at least three different occasions. Each tee
is marked by replicas of the native waterfowl that inhabit the
plantation's rice fields. The most outstanding feature of the
golf course is its clubhouse, an actual replica of a colonial plantation
house from the 1700's. "GOLF Magazine" selected this golf course
85th in the category of the "Top 100 golf courses You Can Play in
the U.S." for 1996. "GOLFWEEK" named it 81st among "America's
100 Best Modern golf courses" for 1997, 42nd in 1998 and 49th in
1999. |
Rating
and Slope |
| Tees |
Yardage |
Rating |
|
Slope |
|
Par |
| |
|
Mens' |
Ladies' |
Mens' |
Ladies' |
|
| Pintail |
6526 |
72.1
|
N/A |
140 |
N/A |
72 |
| Mallard |
6121 |
69.9 |
N/A |
134 |
N/A |
72 |
| Wood
Duck |
5710 |
67.8 |
N/A |
129 |
N/A |
72 |
| Redhead |
4957 |
N/A |
68.2 |
N/A |
113 |
72 |
|
|