For golfers who like a good challenge, there are some great moments to be had between Sintra, Estoril and Cascais. Some carefully maintained courses can be found just outside Lisbon, set in breathtaking landscapes and with complex layouts.
Leaving Lisbon and travelling along the coast to the sea, you come to the emblematic and historic Estoril Golf Course, redesigned by Mackenzie Ross in 1936. This was where Severiano Ballesteros played his first professional competition outside Spain, at the age of 17. The uneven terrain of this course, combined with a landscape of pines and eucalyptus, promises a great challenge for testing the technique.
Continuing along the coast and passing Cascais, you will find the Quinta da Marinha Golf Club. This is a flat course but with a spectacular view over the sea and the Sintra Mountain, designed by the legendary Robert Trent Jones. Set amongst pines trees, the 13th hole is the most impressive. It is a par 4 of 339 metres, which descends towards the sea, ending in a green that has the ocean as a backdrop.
Now entering the coastal area of the Natural Park of Sintra, the Oitavos Dunes Natural Links Golf owes its design to the American architect, Arthur Hills, and respects the dune ecosystem on which it sits. It is the first course in Europe and the second in the world to be awarded the "Certified Gold Audubon Signature Sanctuary" by Audubon International. With great views of the Pena Castle and the Roca Cape, the course has wide, long fairways, but the main challenge lies in its rolling greens which demand finely-tuned puts.
Towards Sintra, in the foothills, Pestana Beloura Golf offers a very particular setting. More than 40,000 trees of various species, scattered around the course, form a green frame for a number of lakes and meandering streams that shape the fairways that are the delight of both professionals and those who just want to perfect their technique. It was designed by William Rocky Roquemore, the same architect who designed the exceptional layout of Belas Clube de Campo, also near Sintra. Very complete and varied, this course is used for various levels of handicap and has two holes that deserve particular attention: hole 2 and hole 18, a memorable par 4 called the Big Hole, where the second strike of the ball must travel 180 metres to the green that is well protected by a difficult to beat lake.