ENNISCRONE GOLF CLUB
🇮🇪 Enniscrone, Sligo, IE
Designed by Donald Steel, Eddie Hackett
Enniscrone Golf Club occupies a dramatic stretch of duneland along the Atlantic coast in County Sligo, where the original layout was shaped by Eddie Hackett in 1974. Hackett routed the course through towering natural sand dunes that rank among the most imposing in Irish golf, creating a links that moves through valleys and over ridges with minimal disturbance to the existing terrain. Donald Steel later revised and extended the design, helping to refine the routing and add length while preserving the wild, tumbling character of the dunes.
The course plays through two distinct environments: the front nine occupies relatively flatter ground closer to the clubhouse, while the back nine ventures into the heart of the dune system where massive sandhills frame narrow fairways and create dramatic elevation changes. Several holes play through corridors carved between dunes that rise forty feet or more on either side, giving the round a sense of isolation and scale uncommon even among Irish links. The closing stretch includes a memorable par-three played from an elevated tee to a green set in a natural amphitheater of sand.
Enniscrone remains less traveled than its more famous neighbors in the northwest, but the quality of the duneland and the routing's use of natural movement have earned it recognition among links enthusiasts. The setting overlooks Killala Bay with views extending to the Ox Mountains inland, and the club maintains a welcoming atmosphere typical of Irish golf clubs outside the major tourist circuits.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Scurmore was designed by Donald Steel and Eddie Hackett.
Yes. Scurmore at Enniscrone Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Scurmore is 36.
Scurmore plays 3,045 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Scurmore is 122.
Scurmore is a 9-hole course.