Come visit us: enjoy the sheer quality of our environment - and a warm personal welcome...

...visit the Scottish Seabird Centre where you can see live pictures of the seabirds through remote controlled cameras on Fidra and the famous Bass Rock.

North Berwick is a picturesque town situated on the shores of the Firth of Forth...

...just 35 minutes by train from Edinburgh, close to the A1 motorway, and perfectly placed to explore the links golf courses in East Lothian.

Visit the 14th century Tantallon Castle, Scottish Museum of Flight or enjoy a leisurely sail round the bays and islands. Enjoy the excellent shopping centre, indoor swimming pool, sports centre, museum and many other attractions.

Of course, the Golf Coast offers the visitor much that enhances and indeed complements our golfing tradition...
Longniddry - closest of our towns and villages to Edinburgh, with a large population of commuters to the capital and an attractive outlook over its golf course to the Firth of Forth. Longniddry Station is but 25 minutes from the capital. Aberlady - the former seaport for Haddington, this village is renowned for its bird sanctuary. It now boasts the new Craigielaw course which has recently joined Kilspindie to add to Aberlady's golfing attraction.
Gullane - the epitome of golf in our area. It's said that Gullane has more regular golfers per head of population than any other place in UK. And so it should be - with three courses in the village as well as Muirfield and Luffness on the outskirts, Gullane is every golfer's dream. Dirleton - said to be the most beautiful village in Scotland, Dirleton has a rural charm all its own. Its village green surrounded by traditional pantile dwellings, its castle with gardens and historic bowling greens, the village inn and a country restaurant - all go towards making Dirleton a special place. And it is shortly to have a golf course at nearby Archerfield.
Fenton Barns - originally a dairy and arable farm, Fenton Barns benefits from the legacy of wartime service as Drem RAF Station: many of the wartime buildings have been transformed into retail outlets, thus creating a retail village in the country. Drem - at the other end of the airfield from Fenton Barns, the hamlet of Drem used to be an important station on the main London line. VIPs from the south on their way to the Biarritz of the North could request a stop at Drem where suitable transport to North Berwick would be waiting. Drem station is a convenient stop for visitors to the area.
East Fortune - another wartime airfield that has been converted into a modern facility, this time as Scotland's Museum of Flight. Already one of the area's most interesting and significant attractions, the Museum has recently benefited from an £8 million upgrade which invites visitors to experience life on a wartime aerodrome. This summer will also see the arrival of Concorde - confidently expected to be the Museum's star attraction.  
Read More...our golf courses, our nature.

 

Origins of Golf Famous Golfers Local History Photo Gallery