Cape Kidnappers GC, the iconic Tom Doak design in New Zeland that celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2024, has issued new pricing for its October-to-May high season. Director of Golf Ray Geffre also announced the hire of a new head golf professional at Cape: Eric Smith, freshly imported from the Kiawah Island Club.
According to Geffre, starting 1 October 2023, international visitors to Cape Kidnappers GC (and its sister property Kauri Cliffs GC) will pay a green fee of 850 New Zealand dollars, while domestic fees remain at 450 NZD per golfer. A newly created green fee has been introduced specifically for Australian nationals: 650 NZD. At this writing, New Zealand and Australian dollars trade at roughly 1:1. Each is valued at approximately 1.5 U.S. dollars.
“We have positioned the new Aussie rate between the international and NZ rates, to acknowledge the proximity of Australia and the importance we place on their business here at Cape Kidnappers,” says Geffre, who noted that offseason rates (Int: $650; Aus. $450; NZ: $250) will continue to apply from June through September. “We recognize there are many upscale golfing options for Australians, not only in metropolitan centers across the county, but also in destinations like Tasmania.
“We want to be competitive. Aussies who make the trip over to Napier deserve a special rate. At the same time, we’re confident the golf course here at Cape has never played so well as right now, thanks to Tom Doak’s 2021 greens renovation and our simultaneous regrasssing of all 18 fairways. What’s more, if there’s a better stay-and-play option anywhere in the Southern Hemisphere, I’d like to know about it.”
Located just 20 km from the seaside, art deco community of Napier, Cape Kidnappers GC resides in the heart of New Zealand’s wine country and directly beside The Farm at Cape Kidnappers, a luxury boutique hotel routinely ranked among the finest in the world. Doak, for one, is a fan: “It’s the nicest lodge in the country. Maybe on Earth.”
Cape Kidnappers, the landform, is equally distinct. Its Western name eventuated when locals attempted to abduct a member of Captain Cook’s crew aboard the HMS Endeavor, after making landfall there on 15 October 1769. As is often the case, however, the Māori appellation for this sandstone headland, Te Kauwae-a-Māui, is far more evocative. And sacred. According to Māori teaching, the peninsula represents a fishhook used to pull the North Island itself out of the sea.
The golf course and lodge occupy an extraordinary 6,000-acre property protected by more than 10 kilometers of protective fencing — meaning the barrier extends nearly as far below ground as above it, to protect endangered species from predators. As a result, golfers and guests may avail themselves of superb hiking, ATV adventures all over this working sheep and steer farm, and all manner of exotic bird and wildlife tours. The tip of Cape Kidnappers is, indeed, home to the world’s largest gannet colony.
Eric Smith
“I had heard of the golf course here at Cape Kidnappers; I’d seen the pictures and pored over all the rankings,” said Smith, who grew up outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. “But pictures and videos honestly don’t do the place justice. The lodge here, the natural setting: They are nothing short of wondrous — off the charts. And let me tell you a secret: PGA professionals have bucket lists, too. It’s a privilege to be working at one, to be playing this golf course on a regular basis.”
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Photos Courtesy of Cape Kidnappers