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Ayer Keroh Country Club is located a mere 10-minutes from the Ayer Keroh Interchange of the main North - South Highway. Located beside the course is the zoo and "Dataran Merdeka" (Independence Square) - both popular tourist spots.
The golf course carved out of virgin jungle and ready for play in 1964 was designed by a team led by Tun Dr. Ghaffar Baba, the then Chief Minister of Malacca, and a golfing aficionado. The designers of the course very wisely maintained a large part of the virgin jungle so as to limit as much as possible the negative ecological impact the golf course would have on the area. Today golfers share the course with a varied species of birds, monkeys and squirrels, and monitor lizards that live in the jungle lining the fairways of the course.
The original course consisted of two nines referred to as Tunku and Ghaffar's Nine. A third nine (Governor's Nine) was added in the mid-nineties. The three nines hug a lake known as the Ayer Keroh Lake which comes into play at quite a few of the holes. Ayer Keroh has its fair share of bunkers and other obstacles at strategic places, but the course is notorious for the jungle that lines both sides of almost every fairway and unmercifully punishes each and every wayward shot. In AKCC - "A ball lost IS indeed a ball lost".
AKCC has hosted a number of major championships, the most prestigious being the 1989 Malaysian Open. A few notable golfers playing on the professional circuit now in Europe, America, Asia and Australia have played here at one time or other. Some illustrious names are Kyi Hla Han, Lucas Parsons, Stephen Leany and Jeff Maggart.
For golfers who come to Malacca, the visit must include a round of golf at AKCC. The natural setting, the sheer length and the challenges of the course will make it an unforgettable experience. Last but not least of the attractions of AKCC is the 19th Hole, the only friendly hole on the course. The comedies, the tragedies and the histories narrated here, will compare with those of the Bard himself, and cheer you up enough, to forget your own gallant but unsuccessful effort to tame the course.
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