Package Information

  • November 14-17

  • 12 person attendance

  • 3 night Villa accommodation

  • Complimentary range balls prior to each round

Rates and Payment

  • $1,255 package

  • $155 deposit paid so far

  • Tee times are paid for at the course per resort policy

  • Does not include $40 tip per person for required forecaddies on Harbor Town

Attendees

  • Carson Gastineau

  • Brad Walentukonis

  • Matt Cascioli

  • Matt Vetter

  • Travis Ives

  • Pontius

  • Brandon Barone

  • Kyle Self

  • Nick Barbieri

  • Chili

  • Nick Chimera

  • Michael Eveland

Tee Times

Saturday November 15th, 2025

Heron Point Golf Course

  • 11:06 AM

  • 11:15 AM

  • 11:24 AM

Sunday November 16th, 2025

Atlantic Dunes Golf Course

  • 8:06 AM

  • 8:15 AM

  • 8:24 AM

Heron Point Golf Course

  • 1:12 PM

  • 1:21 PM

  • 1:30 PM

Monday November 17, 2025

  • 8:24 AM

  • 8:33 AM

  • 8:42 AM

Information Coming

  • Flights

  • Rental car

  • Whether the resort will transport our clubs from end of rounds to range before each round

Course Information

Heron Point by Pete Dye: Hilton Head’s Bold Reimagination

Tucked inside Hilton Head’s iconic Sea Pines Resort, Heron Point is a Pete Dye design that perfectly blends Lowcountry scenery with strategic shot-making. Once known as the Sea Marsh Course, the layout was completely reimagined in 2007 when Dye reshaped the fairways, sculpted dramatic mounding, and introduced his trademark risk-reward challenges. A 2014 renovation softened some green surrounds, making the course friendlier without sacrificing bite.

From the back tees, Heron Point stretches to 7,035 yards (par 72), but with seven sets of tees it can play as short as 5,151 yards. That flexibility makes it welcoming for a wide range of golfers. Championship figures hover around 74.0 / 140, reflecting the course’s blend of length, water hazards, and sharply contoured greens.

What makes Heron Point stand out is how Dye turned relatively flat marshland into a dynamic landscape. Fairways twist and tilt, greens perch on slopes or fall away, and water guards many approaches. Every hole tempts players to decide: attack or lay back? It’s a course where precision pays, but boldness can lead to birdies—or double bogeys.

Beyond the golf, Heron Point is recognized as a Certified Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary, underscoring Sea Pines’ long tradition of pairing world-class golf with environmental stewardship. Together with Harbour Town and Atlantic Dunes, it helps define Sea Pines as one of the Southeast’s premier golf destinations.

Atlantic Dunes by Davis Love III: A Coastal Classic Reborn

When Sea Pines decided to retire Hilton Head’s original Ocean Course—the island’s first golf layout from 1962—they turned to Davis Love III for a modern reinvention. In 2016, the result was Atlantic Dunes, a course that honors its coastal roots while delivering a fresh, strategic challenge.

Love, along with his brother Mark and architect Scot Sherman, opened up playing corridors, introduced sandy dunes and native grasses, and used coquina shells to create a seaside vibe. Thousands of trees came down, acres of sand and turf went in, and the course emerged with a distinctly Lowcountry feel—even if only one hole brushes the Atlantic itself.

At par 72 and 7,010 yards from the back tees, Atlantic Dunes is no pushover. With a rating around 74.3 and slope of 143, it rewards confident shot-making, especially on windy days when the final stretch can play long and demanding. Still, wide fairways and multiple tee boxes make it accessible to all skill levels.

Within a year of opening, Atlantic Dunes was named South Carolina’s Course of the Year, cementing its place alongside Harbour Town and Heron Point as one of Sea Pines’ must-play experiences. It’s a course that feels modern and natural all at once—an elegant nod to Hilton Head’s golfing past and future.

Harbour Town Golf Links: A Shotmaker’s Stage

Since 1969, Harbour Town Golf Links has been the crown jewel of Hilton Head’s Sea Pines Resort and home of the PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage. Designed by Pete Dye with help from a young Jack Nicklaus, it set a new standard in golf architecture—favoring strategy and precision over sheer power.

At par 71 and 7,110 yards, Harbour Town isn’t long by modern standards, but its challenge is timeless. Narrow, tree-lined fairways, overhanging oaks, and some of the smallest greens on Tour demand accuracy from tee to cup. The closing stretch, capped by the iconic 18th along Calibogue Sound and framed by the Harbour Town Lighthouse, delivers one of golf’s most memorable finishes.

The course’s legacy is tied to its tournament: the inaugural Heritage Classic was won by Arnold Palmer the same year the course opened. Since then, legends from Nicklaus and Watson to Spieth and Scheffler have lifted the trophy here.

More than just a Tour stop, Harbour Town endures because it asks golfers to think, shape shots, and value placement over distance—a refreshing reminder of golf’s classic roots in a modern era.