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Fort Worth Star-Telegram
By Charles Clines
July-98

The gallery continued to grow as the two golfers prepared to tee off on the par-3. It's not often a twosome of average golfers can attract an audience of 15 or so. Then again, maybe the onlookers were there just because of the nearby trees. Several were, after all, hanging by their tails from the limbs. Monkeys, you see, do that.

Even if the furry critters didn't seem particularly interested in the humans, the two golfers turned spectators for a while as the adult and baby monkeys frolicked in the trees next to the tee.

That's the way golf can be in Costa Rica, a Central American country known for its wildlife.

In fact, most tourists visit the country to see the rain forests, volcanoes, wildlife and maybe catch a wave or two surfing. But the country that never turns cold also seems on the verge of becoming the next golfing hot spot.

There are few better courses than the year-old Robert Trent Jones Jr.-designed Garra de León Campo de Golf at the Meliá Playa Conchal Golf Beach & Golf Resort on the Pacific side of the country.

I was playing golf with James McAfee, former executive director of the Northern Texas PGA and now the director of golf at the Meliá Playa Conchal resort. We were playing in late June as the so-called winter (rainy season) was just beginning. At 85 degrees, the winter weather wasn't too bad and made one wonder why this is the country's off season. We practically had the course to ourselves.

Although indications are that the sport is ready to boom with at least two other 18-hole courses scheduled to be built, golf has been slow to catch on in this country that's more known for its natural attractions There are three 18-hole courses, and several 9-hole layouts. While not a lot to choose from, the 18-hole courses and the one 9-hole course I played, are excellent tests of golf and well-manicured.

If one likes to walk, the George Fazio-designed Cariari Country Club, which is part of the Meliá Cariari hotel, in San José has caddies Many of the caddies are students and get to play on Mondays and some afternoons, so they know the game. The ones we had read the greens to near perfection.

Joining us at Cariari was Landy Blank, who moved to Costa Rica two years ago to form his Costa Rica Golf Adventures company. He has several golf and sightseeing packages, and because he lives there, he knows the ins and outs of the country.

The nice thing is that Costa Rica is only 31/2 hours from Houston, where I left from on Continental Airlines. It's closer than Hawaii and cheaper, and the scenery is almost as good.

You can fly into San José and stay and play golf at the Meliá Cariari. From there, it's a 31/2-hour bus drive to the Meliá Playa Conchal resort. The Rancho Las Colinas, which features a rolling back nine, is about 20 minutes or so from there.

All Articles
Golf & Travel
By Bradley S. Klein
June/July 1998
Golf News
By Parker Smith
March 1998
On the Green Magazine
By James McAfee
Spring 1998
Corporate Meetings & Incentives
By Peter Huestis
April 1998
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
By Charles Clines
July-98
Florida Golf Monthly
By Jack O'Leary
Sept.-98
Score Fall issue "98 Costa Rica"
Sept.-98Travel:
By Hal Quinn
Show Me the Monkeys!
By Turk Pipkin
T & L Golf Magazine
From Colorado Avid Golfer Magazine
by Matt McKay
Costa Rica - A Land Discovered Waiting To Be Revealed
By Robert Kaufman
January, 2004 issue of Houston Golf magazine.
Si Si Costa Rica
By: Mary E. Porter, Editor
Tee Time Magazine

Golf In The Wild
By Tork Pipkin
From Golf Magazine
January 2004

"Tico Time"
Costa Rica, where golf takes it's place amid nature's splendor

By Dave Seanor
From Golf Week 7-31-2004

Golf Adventures fulfills the Blanks
By Dave Seanor
From Golf Week 7-31-2004

GNN Goes to Costa Rica
By Ryan Ballengee from Golf News Network
July 2007
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