top of page


Trump International Scotland New Course
We had originally booked a tee time on the Old Course. Then the New Course opened in August 2025 with a marketing campaign calling it the best new course in the world for the year. Reviewers fell over themselves to praise it. Golf Digest, top 100 lists, the whole machine. We changed our booking to the New Course well in advance. That's what you do when something is being called the best new course in the world. You want to see it.
Gunnar Kobin
Apr 236 min read
Â
Â


Royal Aberdeen
Royal Aberdeen sits just north of Aberdeen across the River Don, on a stretch of coast called Balgownie. You drive out of the city centre through some slightly grim industrial outskirts, past a sewage works if I remember right, and then suddenly you're at a proper old Scottish golf club with gorse and dunes and a clubhouse from another century. The transition is jarring in a good way.
Gunnar Kobin
Apr 236 min read
Â
Â


A Drambuie Round at Peterhead
Peterhead is one of those courses I'm glad I played but probably won't be making a special trip back for. We'd done the proper Aberdeen-area itinerary already on this trip. Trump International, Royal Aberdeen, Murcar, Cruden Bay. Peterhead was the fifth round and at that point in the week I was both physically tired and spoiled by what I'd already seen. The Craigewan Links is a perfectly good course with a few genuinely outstanding holes and a few that are just there to fill
Gunnar Kobin
Apr 226 min read
Â
Â


Notes from Cruden Bay
There are courses where the architecture is the star and there are courses where the land is the star. Cruden Bay is both at once. You walk off the 18th green and you can't tell whether you've just played one of the most brilliantly designed courses in Scotland or just spent four hours on the most spectacular piece of duneland nature ever handed to a golf course architect. The honest answer is both. Old Tom Morris laid out the original course in 1899.
Gunnar Kobin
Apr 227 min read
Â
Â
bottom of page