FORE Magazine

Top Menu

  • About Me
  • Contact Us
  • Home

Main Menu

  • Current Issue
  • Digital Book
  • Profiles
  • Sustainability
  • Travel
  • 19th Hole
  • Classic Course
  • FORE Her
  • More
    • Know the Rules
    • Handicap Hints
    • SCGA Junior
    • Where Are They Now?
    • News
    • Public Affairs
Sign in / Join

Login

Welcome! Login in to your account
Lost your password?

Lost Password

Back to login

logo

FORE Magazine

  • Current Issue
  • Digital Book
  • Profiles
  • Sustainability
  • Travel
  • 19th Hole
  • Classic Course
  • FORE Her
  • More
    • Know the Rules
    • Handicap Hints
    • SCGA Junior
    • Where Are They Now?
    • News
    • Public Affairs
— Winter 2026At The TurnFeaturedProfiles
Home›— Winter 2026›Catalina Bound

Catalina Bound

By Robert Kaufman
January 30, 2026
522
0
Share:

CLOSE YOUR EYES. Now imagine you’re playing golf on an idyllic island somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. Palm trees sway, the locals are welcoming and pleasure boats line a gently rippling bay fronting a sandy beach. Are you picturing Hanalei? Maui? Kona? Far from it. In fact, you can get there without ever leaving California. It’s Catalina, the only inhabited island of the eight-island Channel Island archipelago off the Southern California coast.

If you’ve never been, you’re in for a treat. For starters, the nine-hole Catalina Island GC legitimizes the term “best-kept secret,” but there’s also a chance to sharpen your putting competence at Golf Gardens Mini Golf or, for those in the know, flip frisbees at a secluded disc golf layout on the hillside overlooking Avalon, a tiny hamlet reminiscent of a European coastal village and the primary tourism hub for Catalina Island.

There are approximately 4,000 residents on 75-square-mile Catalina Island, 90 percent of whom live in Avalon. That number is dwarfed by the one million visitors arriving every year to embrace the island’s suspended-in-time charm.

Photo by Ron Niebrugge

Catalina Island GC was built in 1892 as a three-hole layout, and is now considered the oldest course west of the Mississippi. It was expanded to nine holes in the early 1900s.

With a boatload of bunkers and small, undulating greens, the course is no pushover, as the likes of Tour pros Phil Mickelson, Corey Pavin and Amy Alcott have discovered. Even a young prodigy, Tiger Woods, lost a couple of matches on this track.

The primary mode of transport to the island is a 70-minute ride on the Catalina Express (departure points from Long Beach, Dana Point and San Pedro) which often rewards passengers with up-close encounters with pods of dolphins or whales.

Photo by Jon Lord

Fast food and stoplights are non-existent on Catalina, and a traffic jam consists of several golf carts converging at an intersection.

Photo by Danita Delimont

Previous Article

A NEW CHAPTER BEGINS AT PEBBLE BEACH

Next Article

Jim Murray

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Robert Kaufman

Related articles More from author

  • 19th HoleFeaturedIn The ClubhouseSummer 2025

    Revenge Dining

    August 20, 2025
    By David Weiss
  • Profiles

    Easy Aussie: Ian Baker-Finch relishes the West Coast Swing

    November 16, 2017
    By Judd Spicer
  • ProfilesSpring 2017

    Once A Bruin, Always a Bruin: Women’s Golf Coach Carrie Forsyth’s Abiding Love of UCLA

    April 26, 2017
    By Jill Painter Lopez
  • ProfilesWinter 2023

    A Modern Throwback: Cole Young Calls his Own Shots

    February 7, 2023
    By Adam Hawk
  • — FALL 2025FeaturedIn The Clubhouse

    Len Kennett

    November 4, 2025
    By Joe Passov
  • — Winter 2026FeaturedIn The Clubhouse

    Maggie Made Over!

    January 30, 2026
    By SCGA Staff

Recent Posts

  • At The TurnFeaturedSummer 2025

    THE COLORS OF KAUA’I

  • — Winter 202619th HoleFeaturedIn The Clubhouse

    DESTINATION DINING

  • — FALL 2025FeaturedIn The Clubhouse

    Len Kennett

  • — Winter 2026FeaturedOn The TeeSustainability

    A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT

  • FeaturedSpring 2025Travel

    The Heart of Idaho

— Winter 2026CoversFeatured

SCOTTSDALE FOR ALL

THE LOWDOWN ON HIGH SEASON IN THE VALLEY OF THE SUN HEAT-SEEKING GOLFERS who favor Scottsdale, Ariz., relish the sublime mountain vistas, stately saguaro cacti and perfectly groomed, overseeded fairways. ...
  • GALLERY GOLF

    By Tod Leonard
    January 30, 2026
  • SoCal Flagship

    By David Weiss
    January 30, 2026
  • DESTINATION DINING

    By David Weiss
    January 30, 2026
  • Maggie Made Over!

    By SCGA Staff
    January 30, 2026
© 2016 FORE Magazine About Us | Contact Us | Advertise