Routes

Routes

  • Big Sky Summit
    Big Sky Summit is a Rocky Mountain golf route built around the dramatic landscapes of Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho towering peaks, alpine lakes with crystal-clear reflections, and wide-open skies. It mixes high-country resort golf with stretches of ranchland and rolling plains, where cattle country and mountain towns sit just a scenic drive apart. Think fresh air, big views, and courses that feel like they’re carved into the wilderness.
  • Bourbon Trail
    Bourbon Trail is a Kentucky golf route centered around Louisville and the surrounding bourbon country, ideal for pairing classic courses with distillery stops and a long weekend itinerary.
  • Cape & Palmetto Coast
    Cape & Palmetto Coast is a coastal golf route stretching along South Carolina’s shoreline and into southern North Carolina, with a warm nod toward the Lowcountry around Savannah. Expect ocean air, wide sandy beaches, and marshland scenery palmetto and palm trees framing fairways, Spanish moss hanging over quiet waterways, and the occasional alligator sunning near the edges of a lagoon. It’s a relaxed, sea-breeze style of golf built around resort towns like Myrtle Beach and the laid-back charm of the Carolina coast.
  • Citrus Coast
    Citrus Coast is an Atlantic-side golf route that runs up Florida’s shoreline. From the energy of Miami through Palm Beach, Daytona Beach, St. Augustine, and Jacksonville, then continues toward the coastal stretch just south of Savannah. It blends bright, tropical flavor with classic seaside scenery: palm-lined fairways, ocean breezes, rolling dunes, and pockets of Intracoastal waterways and marshland. Think sunrise tee times, vibrant beach towns, and a mix of modern coastal resorts and historic stops that make it easy to pair great golf with a laid-back, road-trip pace.
  • Coal Country Greens
    Coal Country Greens is an Appalachian golf route centered on West Virginia and the surrounding coal and river valleys stretching into southwestern Pennsylvania and across the border into eastern Ohio. It’s a region of forested ridgelines, winding backroads, and historic mining towns, where courses feel carved into the hills and framed by rolling hollows and big-sky overlooks. Expect a mix of rugged mountain golf and classic heartland charm, with Pittsburgh serving as a convenient gateway for trip starts, flights, and easy access into the hills.
  • Desert Dice Venture
    Desert Dice Venture is a high-energy golf route built around southern Nevada, anchored by Las Vegas and rolling northeast through Mesquite into the red-rock landscapes of southern Utah near St. George. It’s where neon nights meet desert mornings: wide fairways framed by rugged mountains, sunbaked canyons, and dramatic sandstone views. Expect resort-style golf, warm-weather tee times, and an easy road-trip rhythm play a round, chase the scenery, then cap it off with the lights, dining, and entertainment that only Vegas can deliver.
  • Desert Run
    Desert Run is a Southwest golf circuit that links the sun soaked fairways of Arizona, including Phoenix and Scottsdale, with New Mexico’s high desert charm and the iconic oasis golf culture of Palm Springs, California. It is a route defined by wide open skies, rugged mountain backdrops, and dramatic desert color, with saguaro silhouettes, red rock horizons, and sunsets that turn the landscape electric. Expect championship resort golf, vibrant food and nightlife hubs, and an easy year round escape where every drive feels like a postcard and every tee time comes with big views.
  • Great Lakes Waterway
    Great Lakes Waterway is a shoreline golf route built around Michigan’s Great Lakes heartland, with the route arc stretching from Cleveland along Lake Erie, up through Michigan’s lake country, then west toward Chicago and into the Milwaukee area. It combines freshwater coasts, dune lined horizons, and harbor towns with scenic drives that follow the water from one golf stop to the next. Expect cool lake breezes, pine and hardwood backdrops, and a mix of classic courses and resort destinations that feel made for summer weekends, long daylight rounds, and laid back lakeside evenings.
  • Gulf Coast Greens
    Gulf Coast Greens is a coastal golf road trip that follows the warm-water curve of the Gulf, starting along Florida’s west coast and Panhandle, rolling past Panama City and Destin, then continuing through Gulf Shores, Biloxi, and Gulfport. From there it carries into Louisiana, including the Baton Rouge, Lafayette, and Lake Charles corridor, and finishes in Texas along the coast from Galveston down through Corpus Christi to South Padre Island. Expect sea breezes, palm lined fairways, barrier island scenery, and easygoing resort towns, with a mix of beach time, great food stops, and golf that feels built for long weekends and sunrise tee times.
  • Heartland Greens
    Heartland Greens is a Midwest golf route through America’s central core, linking Indiana and Illinois across Iowa and Missouri and into Kansas and Nebraska, where river cities, farm country, and wide-open skies set the stage for classic courses and easy road-trip drives.
  • Iron Copper Passage
    Iron Capper Passage is a Northwoods golf route built around the Lake Superior rim, stretching through Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and into northern Wisconsin and Minnesota. It’s defined by rugged rock outcrops, dense evergreen forests, and the historic copper and iron country that shaped the region’s towns and backroads. Expect dramatic scenery, cool lake air, and destination style courses that feel wild and remote, with Minneapolis serving as an easy gateway for starting the trip.
  • Mickey’s Retreat
    Mickey’s Retreat is a Central Florida golf route centered on Orlando and the surrounding corridor, extending down toward Lakeland and reaching into the areas just north of the city. It’s designed for easy travel and flexible itineraries, with a mix of resort style courses, palm lined fairways, and sunshine friendly tee times that fit everything from a quick weekend getaway to a full vacation week. Expect convenient drives, plenty of lodging and dining options, and that classic Orlando energy that makes it simple to pair golf with family fun and downtime.
  • Mystic Highlands & River Route
    Mystic Highlands & River Route is a Southeast golf loop that winds through the Appalachian foothills and river valleys stretching from North Georgia across western North Carolina and Tennessee, dipping into Alabama and Mississippi, and reaching into eastern Arkansas. Expect mountain ridgelines, hardwood forests, and scenic drives that connect classic Southern courses with relaxed resort stops and small-town charm.
  • Nor’easter Links Escape
    Nor’easter Links Escape is a Northeast golf getaway that runs from eastern Pennsylvania and northern New Jersey through the New York City corridor and across Connecticut, with the option to extend into the Boston and coastal New England region. It blends classic East Coast landscapes, coastal breezes, and rolling hill country with easy drives between historic towns and major hubs. Expect a mix of traditional club style golf and destination worthy stops, paired with great food, waterfront scenery, and that crisp, salt air feel that defines the Nor’east.
  • Pacific Pines Passage
    Pacific Pines Passage is a Pacific Northwest coastal golf route that follows the rugged shoreline of Oregon and Washington, with the option to dip into far northern California. It blends rocky headlands, misty mornings, and towering pine forests with dramatic ocean views and windswept fairways that feel made for true links style golf. Expect cool sea air, scenic drives between beach towns and forested stretches, and destination stops that highlight the region’s most iconic coastal courses.
  • Piedmont Pines & Blue Ridge Fairways
    Tobacco Road is a Carolina golf route centered on the Pinehurst and Sandhills region, with the broader hub stretching through Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro, and Charlotte. It’s classic North Carolina golf country, known for pine forests, sandy soil, and course designs that feel firm, fast, and built for shot making. Expect a dense collection of destination worthy rounds within easy driving distance, plus the kind of golf town atmosphere that makes it simple to stack multiple great tee times into one trip. If you want to extend it, a light dip into northern South Carolina can add a few extra stops without changing the route’s North Carolina identity.
  • Rocky Mountain High Circuit
    Rocky Mountain High Circuit is a high elevation golf route that links Utah’s Wasatch Front and Salt Lake City with the wide open mountain basins of Wyoming and the Front Range energy of Colorado, including Denver. It’s a region defined by towering peaks, crisp air, and big sky scenery, where resort towns and outdoor culture make every stop feel like part golf trip, part mountain getaway. Expect dramatic backdrops on nearly every tee box, cooler summer rounds, and road trip drives that trade desert edges for alpine views.
  • Sacred Links Sanctum
    Sacred Sanctum Links is a Southern Plains golf route centered on Oklahoma, extending into the wide open edges of north Texas, the Panhandle near Amarillo, and the western reaches of Arkansas. It’s a region of big skies, prairie winds, and long scenic drives where golf feels unhurried and grounded, with courses that sit comfortably in the landscape rather than fighting it. Expect a blend of understated towns, welcoming clubhouse culture, and a road trip rhythm that pairs well with a long weekend or a laid back multi stop loop.
  • Sierra Sequoia Silverado
    Sierra Sequoia Silverado is a Northern California golf route that links the alpine landscapes of Lake Tahoe and the Sierra Nevada with the vineyard valleys of Napa and Sonoma before reaching the towering redwood forests of California’s north coast. The route moves naturally from mountain lakes and pine-lined fairways into wine country resorts and finally into the cool shade of ancient sequoia forests. Expect scenic drives through alpine passes, vineyard valleys, and towering coastal forests with a mix of refined resort golf, classic Northern California layouts, and dramatic natural backdrops.
  • Sunset PCH Route
    Sunset PCH is a California coastal golf route that follows the Pacific Coast Highway from San Diego up through the Central Coast and Santa Cruz, finishing in the San Francisco area. It’s built around classic shoreline scenery, ocean cliff overlooks, and long golden hour drives where the coastline is part of the experience, not just the backdrop. Expect salty sea air, cool morning marine layers that burn off into bright afternoons, and a mix of resort stops and iconic coastal rounds that pair perfectly with beach towns, seafood, and sunset views.
  • Texas Triangle
    Texas Triangle is a big city golf circuit built around the state’s signature metro triangle, connecting Dallas Fort Worth, Austin, San Antonio, and Houston. It blends modern resort comforts with classic Texas layouts, wide open fairways, and a road trip rhythm that stays easy because every stop is anchored by a major hub. Expect great food and nightlife between rounds, plenty of lodging options, and a mix of championship level courses and approachable daily play that makes this route ideal for long weekends or a full week of golf.
  • The Buckeye Circuit
    Buckeye Circuit is an Ohio focused golf route that circles the heart of the Buckeye State, connecting the major hubs and classic golf regions from Cincinnati and Dayton through Columbus and into the Toledo corridor. It balances city access with easy drives through rolling farmland, river valleys, and old school Midwestern course settings. Expect a mix of traditional private club style layouts, strong public options, and weekend friendly itineraries that make it simple to build a loop around multiple rounds without long travel gaps.
  • The Colonial
    Colonial is a Mid Atlantic golf route centered on Washington, D.C. and the surrounding Maryland and Northern Virginia region, extending south toward Richmond and, if desired, up the corridor toward Philadelphia and southern New Jersey. It pairs historic towns, riverfront scenery, and classic East Coast landscapes with easy travel between major hubs and day trip friendly golf stops. Expect a mix of traditional course design, polished club settings, and itineraries that fit naturally around museums, waterfront dining, and the region’s deep American history.
  • The Foundry Line
    Foundry Line is a western Pennsylvania golf route centered on Pittsburgh, shaped by the region’s steel heritage and the river corridors that connect its towns and countryside. It follows a practical road trip line from the city’s historic industrial core out through rolling hills, wooded valleys, and classic small town stops, with the option to extend toward central Pennsylvania for a longer loop. Expect straightforward drives, strong traditional golf, and a blue collar, clubhouse friendly vibe that pairs well with great local food and riverfront scenery.