Australian News Today

‘We’re not the Gold Coast’: King Island’s pride at top golf accolade leads to infrastructure push

‘We’re not the Gold Coast’: King Island’s pride at top golf accolade leads to infrastructure push

In short:

King Island’s Cape Wickham Links this year became the second golf course in history to knock the Royal Melbourne Golf Club from its top spot in Australian Golf Digest’s list of Australia’s best 100 courses.

The development of two world-class golf courses has opened up a new avenue of tourism for the rugged island. 

What’s next?

The additional fame of the island’s two courses has presented challenges for an island already stretched for accommodation, especially as two new courses are on the way.

If you want to visit Australia’s best golf course, you’ll need a plane. Or be willing to share a boat ride with hundreds of cows.

That is, unless you’re one of the roughly 1,500 people living on remote King Island, located about halfway between Victoria and Tasmania in the Bass Strait.

At less than 10 years old, Cape Wickham Links on the island’s northern tip this year became the second golf course in history to knock the Royal Melbourne Golf Club from its top spot in Australian Golf Digest’s list of the best 100 courses in the country.

The development of two luxury golf courses have transformed King Island’s tourism industry.(ABC News: Morgan Timms)

The list is the 19th biennial ranking of the country’s top courses.

For nearly four decades the Royal Melbourne’s West Course has held the crown, aside from 2010 when the title went to suburban Melbourne course Kingston Heath.

This year, the remote public course has won the tussle to the top … just.

With the island’s Cape Wickham Links golf course and nearby Ocean Dunes course both ranking within the top 13, and two more courses in the pipeline, tourism operators are calling for more accommodation to meet increasing visitor needs.

Swapping coastal paddocks for windswept fairways

Famed for its artisan cheese, premium beef, luxury seafood, and relaxed lifestyle, King island’s agriculture-dominated economy thrives on steady rainfall, temperate climate and rich soils.