BALLOCHMYLE GOLF CLUB
🏴 Mauchline, East Ayrshire, Scotland
Designed by James Braid
Ballochmyle Golf Club sits in the rolling Ayrshire countryside near Mauchline, a small town with strong connections to Scotland's national poet, Robert Burns. The course was designed by James Braid, one of the Great Triumvirate of early twentieth-century golf architecture alongside Harry Coltrane and J.H. Taylor. Braid's prolific design career included hundreds of courses across Britain, many of them parkland layouts that made strategic use of natural terrain while remaining accessible to club golfers.
The course occupies elevated ground with views across the Ayrshire landscape toward the Firth of Clyde and, on clear days, the Isle of Arran. The routing takes advantage of the natural contours, with holes playing over and around gentle ridges and valleys typical of the region. Mature trees line several fairways, and the layout combines open, windswept holes with more sheltered, wooded sections that require different shot-making approaches.
Ballochmyle serves a local membership and reflects the character of many Scottish inland courses: unpretentious, well-maintained by dedicated volunteers and staff, and designed to test golfers through strategic bunkering and green complexes rather than excessive length. The club maintains traditional values of hospitality and straightforward golf, offering a genuine Scottish club experience away from the more famous championship links of the Ayrshire coast.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Ballochmyle was designed by James Braid.
Yes. Ballochmyle at Ballochmyle Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Ballochmyle is 70.
Ballochmyle plays 5,968 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Ballochmyle is 124.
Ballochmyle is a 18-hole course.