Trip Dispatch: A first impression of Bandon Dunes Golf Resort along the Oregon coast

BANDON, Ore. – My caddie, Joey Russell, handed me a hybrid.

I wanted a wedge. All I could see on the terrifying 85-yard approach to a plateau green on the par-4 sixth hole at Pacific Dunes was the ferocious greenside bunker on the left. Russell was wisely training me how to play golf properly at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort. After all, he's one of the few original caddies dating back to the resort's opening in 1999.

I punched the shot just perfectly. The ball climbed and crested the huge hill and settled 10 feet from the cup, setting up a rare birdie during five days of golf in rough early season weather in March. A likely chunked wedge wouldn't have fared so well.

The shot was a proper reminder that this tiny little slice of golf heaven in southwest Oregon is perhaps the only place in America where true links golf can be played. Bandon Dunes has quickly risen to the top of the heap on every golfer's bucket list. It's more affordable than Pebble Beach Resorts in sunnier California and more fun than playing four dastardly Pete Dye designs at The American Club in Wisconsin. It's got more holes on the ocean than the Kiawah Island Golf Resort in South Carolina. Bandon Dunes, a resort sculpted upon the edges of 100-foot oceanfront cliffs, is almost perfect … except for dodgy weather and the hassles of getting here. My first trip to the resort was memorable in each of these categories, but don't let my bad breaks derail you.

Bandon Dunes will live up to the hype, with or without sunny skies, cancelled flights or otherwise.

Walk @bandondunesgolf with @golfadvisor and the #hickorygang from @golfgetaways Shoutout to @kempersports for such a memorable #golftrip

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Getting to Bandon

Getting to Bandon from anywhere outside of driving distance is an adventure to put it kindly.

It's a five-hour drive from the Portland International Airport, three hours from Medford Airport, and just under three hours from the Eugene Airport. But it's only 35 minutes from the Southwest Oregon Regional Airport, a tiny outpost on Coos Bay in North Bend. When I got the press release touting United Airline's seasonal nonstop service from Denver International Airport (DEN) to North Bend (OTH), I couldn't help but chuckle. It read:

The twice weekly round-trip flights, which will be offered every Wednesday and Sunday from June 11 through Oct. 4, put Bandon Dunes within a single stop of virtually every major city in the United States. The flight schedule was designed specifically with golfers in mind. The arrival flight (DEN-OTH, 11:15 a.m.-1:09 p.m.) departs from Denver late enough for passengers from most major airports to connect, and the early afternoon arrival allows enough time in the summer months to fit in 18 holes before sunset. The early afternoon return flight (OTH-DEN, 1:44 p.m.-5:17 p.m.) gives golfers just enough time to tee it up for one last morning round before heading to the airport.

My March flights in and out of North Bend weren't so smooth. As I was boarding my flight from San Francisco, the gate agent announced that we might be diverted to Eugene mid-flight because of dangerously "low" cloud cover in North Bend. Thankfully the plane landed in North Bend without incident, although it was bizarre that the flight attendant would not tell us where we were until on the ground.

The return home was even wackier. The original flight was cancelled after the plane from San Francisco WAS diverted to Eugene. The airport staff in North Bend gave us three choices: Take a 2 ½-hour cab ride to Eugene to catch a later flight, come back tomorrow, or pray that the plane on the way back to San Francisco lands and picks up passengers waiting in North Bend. I wisely choose the first option, taking a cab stuffed with strangers. I got home eight hours later than expected, but at least I made it, unlike those poor folks who waited for a plane that never came.

Next time, I'll likely drive from where my home in San Jose, a 573-mile, 9-hour trek. It's probably worth it to avoid unforeseen airport fiascos. Granted, my flight drama was during throngs of the worst winter the West Coast has seen in decades. Hopefully, summer weather equals friendlier skies.

Five first impressions

By now, you've probably already seen plenty of pictures of the links (I didn't know so much gorse existed in America) or read all about how Mike Keiser built Bandon Dunes from a vision in his mind or heard Matt Ginella rave about Bandon (the name he has bestowed upon his pending first child) on Golf Channel's Morning Drive. I'll just offer some quick first impressions:

  1. Every facet of the resort (managed by KemperSports) is seamless, from the golf to the grub to the transportation. The shuttle system is the best I've experienced at any major golf property. I've heard plenty of people call Bandon a golf factory almost like that's a bad thing. It isn't. Golfers show up by the thousands and go home happy. I've heard Pebble Beach Golf Links called overrated many times. I've never heard anyone say that about Bandon Dunes.
  1. Nothing felt overpriced. Even in high season, playing any of the four courses at Bandon Dunes ($285 plus $100 caddie fee) costs slightly more than half of what it does to play Pebble Beach ($525 plus caddie). The food selections were varied and everything tasty. The Braised Lamb Stew and Grandma's Meatloaf are all the rage at McKee's Pub, although I fell for the St. Louis ribs. If I had to register a complaint, it would be that the meal portions are too much. They don't leave room for the killer desserts, like the carmel popcorn Crème Brulee at The Gallery restaurant in the main lodge. Hashtag, first world problems.
  1. Comfort is king. Since the resort isn't into couples trips or 'romance', there's no need to dress up for anything. Everything is casual. I wore the same pair of jeans every night at dinner. There were times when I came off the course soaked with rain and hail (I saw plenty over the span of walking 112 holes) and sat down in the Tufted Puffin Lounge or Trails End for breakfast/lunch and nobody gave me a second glance over my wild hair and soggy, disheveled appearance.
  1. Probably the biggest surprise were the accommodations. I had always heard they were "spartan." My upstairs two-bedroom upstairs loft at Chrome Lake was quite nice. There's a big enough common area for a foursome to gather with a sitting area to watch a TV and two alcoves, one with a fireplace that we used for drying golf gear and another with a card table. Separate bedrooms and separate bathrooms made it ideal for two guys who need some space.
  1. Details make all the difference. My room had a contraption called the "DryGuy" I'd never seen before that could dry your golf glove or shoes. I also loved that the waterproof scorecards don't tatter at the first sign up foul weather. You can easily get "caddie cash" in any pro shop and a receipt of the transaction in case you're playing business golf with a client or associate and want to expense the day.

Off-property fun

I did spend plenty of quality time off-property, something most golfers don't. For two nights, I holed up in a magnificent vacation rental called "All Sunsets & Surf" across the street from a beautiful beach and the Face Rock State Scenic Viewpoint. It is one of several homes offered by the owners of Bandon Crossings Golf Club, a fun course in its own right. Designed by Dan Hixson, Bandon Crossings delivers some luxuries Bandon Dunes doesn't - bentgrass greens, shelter from the coastal winds on a gently rolling piece of forested land and best of all, carts for sore feet. The five par 3s are superb.

I also toured more coastal cliffs belonging to two future courses that could become just as special as what's at Bandon Dunes – the Sheep Ranch near the resort and Pacific Gales in Port Orford, a budding links destination 35 minutes south of Bandon. The Sheep Ranch, already a collection of greens, tees and fairways rented out by the half day near Bandon Dunes, is expected to be the site of a new Gil Hanse design. No plans for construction have been announced.

Meanwhile, Pacific Gales is in the final stages of raising money and getting a few government regulatory details wrapped up, so it can begin construction later this year. The routing by Chicago-based architect Dave Esler finishes with holes set upon 100-foot ocean cliffs at the end of each nine. "It's a great piece of land," says Pacific Gales co-founder Jim Haley.
Read more here to find out how you can become a founding member of the club.

Fine dining at Redfish, home to a cool, upstairs loft for rent featuring stunning views of the rocky coast, and a tour of the adjacent Hawthorne Gallery, stocked with intriguing art, completed my introduction to the tiny but charming fishing village of Port Orford.

The favorites

What's my favorite course at Bandon Dunes? It's the question everybody gets asked.

I posed the same query on social media and enjoyed the banter that followed. There is no consensus, that's for sure. Tom Doak's Pacific Dunes got the most first place votes in my informal poll and Old MacDonald got the most last-place votes, but all four are almost interchangeable. My personal preference leans toward this ranking (which could change next time I visit):

1a: Pacific Dunes
1b: Bandon Trails
1c: Bandon Dunes
4: Old MacDonald

I was smitten with how enjoyable and different Bandon Trails by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw felt and played compared to the other courses. I didn't take to the twists at Old Mac – the wide, featureless fairways and evil greens by Doak and Jim Urbina – with similar passion. It just didn't fit my eye or my game. Even so, there are some spectacular holes on Old Mac (including Nos. 3, 7, 8, 18).

Bandon Dunes, the resort's original course by David McLay Kidd, seems to be the best mix of ocean views and playability. Possibly the one consensus is that everybody loves the Preserve, the 13-hole, par-3 course. It's got everything to love about links golf – punchbowl greens, dunes, shifting winds and ocean views – all packed into a condensed 1 ½-hour round that's a friendlier walk.

After hiking 112 holes in hail, rain and high winds for five days, I just couldn't muster the strength to putt the Punchbowl, have a shootout on Shorty's or explore the Labyrinth, a maze on the resort grounds. Now that I'm home again, my day dreams continually drift back to Bandon Dunes. Just what Keiser wanted.

Jason Scott Deegan has reviewed and photographed more than 1,100 courses and written about golf destinations in 25 countries for some of the industry's biggest publications. His work has been honored by the Golf Writer's Association of America and the Michigan Press Association. Follow him on Instagram at @jasondeegangolfpass and Twitter at @WorldGolfer.
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Trip Dispatch: A first impression of Bandon Dunes Golf Resort along the Oregon coast