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DESTINATIONS GOLF & SPORTS TOURISM | MADEIRA


3


MADEIRA ACTIVITIES


Take a 4x4 tour


With winding cliff roads, driving in Madeira is not


for the faint of heart. So let someone else do it, preferably in a 4x4 that can make short work of big hills. Some of the sheer drops will make your stomach sing, as I found on a


tour with Green Devil Safari. Watch the sunset


On the way back to Funchal, pop in for a bite to eat (try black scabbardfish, a local delicacy) at Sol Poente, a Ponta do Sol restaurant that seems to have been


strategically placed for the best possible view of the setting sun.


Toboggan to the city


Make your way up to Monte and then head back down again via this utterly singular


experience in which you sit in a wicker basket while two nattily dressed men push, pull and slide you down 1.25 miles of roads at hair-raising speed.


top tipop tip


Recommend golfing clients visit madeiragolfpassport.com to gain discounted packages with a Madeira Golf Passport


There are currently two courses on Madeira’s main island, though one of them is essentially three courses in one. Santo da Serra, about 25 minutes from (and several hundred metres above) Funchal, is a 27-hole course that opened in 1991. It has three distinct nine-hole layouts: Desertas, with its lush fairways and beautiful water hazards; Machico, with its fabulous views of the distant mountains, not to mention a testing tee shot over a deep gorge (a test that, sadly, I failed); and tree-lined Serras. Santo da Serra was the first course to officially open


on Madeira, and it was joined just two years later by Palheiro Golf, although both courses had existed as private enterprises since the 1930s. The latter, about 10 minutes’ drive from the heart of Funchal, also boasts staggering scenery (it recently won World’s Best Panoramic Clubhouse at the World Golf Awards) and presents its own tough challenge. When you can tear your eyes away from the views, that is.


BOOK IT


Sunvil offers a seven-night holiday at Casa Velha do Palheiro – a historic boutique hotel located on the Palheiro Estate with panoramic views of the golf course – from £1,736 per person based on two sharing, including flights from Gatwick to Funchal departing on December 1, 23kg of luggage and private transfers. Golf payable locally. sunvil.co.uk


42 30 OCTOBER 2025


DRIVING FORCE If clients are still sceptical about a golf break on an island with just two golf courses, say the two magic words: Porto Santo. Part of the Madeiran archipelago, this island can be reached via a short flight or daily ferry. It has a four-mile golden sand beach and, more importantly for some, an 18-hole course that opened in 2004, designed by the late, great Seve Ballesteros. I didn’t get to play that one. Nor did I get to play the


course that could well be a game-changer for Madeira. Ponta do Pargo, about 45 minutes’ drive from Funchal, will be the home of the island’s third course, designed


by legendary British golfer Sir Nick Faldo. It is due to open in January 2027 and could become a beacon for birdie hunters. I got a preview of the under-construction course, threaded delicately around Ponta do Pargo’s clifftops, and it promises to be truly spectacular. “Almost every hole has a view of the sea,” says Saulo Nunes, a senior technician at the Madeira Development Society, who gave me a guided tour. “It’s more directed to the player who wants thrills.” It will take the number of courses on the archipelago to four and help unlock the door to lengthier golf breaks.


OFF COURSE On the rare occasions when the swinging stops, there’s plenty in Madeira to keep golfers occupied (as well as any golf widowers or widows along for the journey). Funchal, founded in 1421, would take a dozen walking tours just to scratch the surface. Foodies will find plenty of choice, including three Michelin-starred restaurants, and for obvious reasons the Madeira wine flows like water. A well-timed trip could coincide with festivities such as the Wine Festival in August and September or the Columbus Festival (as in, Christopher), also in September, while New Year’s Eve has an enviable fireworks blowout. Such is Madeira’s climate that, with 10 hours of sunlight on January 1, clients could have a lie-in after burning the midnight oil and still have time to cram in 36 holes on any combination of the island’s courses before the sun dips below the horizon. But whatever the time of year, convincing golf-loving clients to visit Madeira should be a piece of cake.


TW travelweekly.co.uk


CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: New Year’s Eve fireworks, Madeira; Palheiro Golf course, Funchal; Santo da Serra Golf course, Funchal PICTURES: Henrique Seruca; Shutterstock/Brester Irina, Yosefer


PICTURE: Shutterstock/Victor Maschek


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