Nambucca Heads Island Golf Club, in the charming fishing and holiday town of Nambucca Heads, occupies the entire 32 hectares of Stuart Island, accessible via causeway bridge over the Nambucca River. In the five years that Johnathon Zirkler has been General Manager, there have been five floods. The most recent one was a doozy.

In May of 2025, floodwaters reached record-breaking highs, surpassing records that had stood since 1950. Power was out, roads were closed, the government offered disaster relief payments. Local Mayor Gary Lee said, “The floodwaters around the area are something I’ve never seen in 50 years”.

“It’s catastrophic,” Lee told Sky News.

As the waters subsided, the silt on the course was 12 inches thick. There was mud everywhere. Only eight greens remained above water.

If the Nambucca River floods, the island golf course will get wet. but it bounces back as quickly. PHOTO: Supplied.

The community rallied. A Facebook post asking for help attracted dozens of members. The president of neighbouring Macksville GC, Brad Fortescue, owns earth moving company Fortade Group. “Brad and his team were able to come along and help us move a lot of the mud really quickly to get us back up and running quicker,” Zirkler says.

Following this “one in a hundred year” flood, people were back playing golf on the island three weeks later. On four holes, anyway. Within two months, the entire 18-hole route was in play. Outside a couple of little patches, it’s in tremendous condition, according to Zirkler.

“It’s hardened up really well. The fairways have sprung back to life. We’ve got Wintergreen Sports Couch up here; it’s a stadium style grass and it’s really good. We have 15 greens that are fantastic, and three with a couple of little areas where we need to get the right sort of chemicals into the ground to help sustain that grass growth,” Zirkler says.

Golfers need little convincing: the course just had its busiest January on record. “We can do about 27,000 rounds a year. In January, we did almost 4000. Every day, it was just phenomenal,” Zirkler says.

Even the tail end of Cyclone Alfred wrought havoc on Coffs Harbour GC. PHOTO: Supplied.

Zirkler, who had ten years at Toowomba Golf Club – eight as a professional, two as General Manager – says NHIGC is a “fantastic little country course”.

“It’s tight – you’ve got to be be accurate off the tee. But more so you have to be putting yourself in the right place on the greens to be able to score,” Zirkler says.

Notable holes on the course include the first, which has the Nambucca River running down the left edge of the fairway. Zirkler also singles out the par-3 13th which heads towards the imposing Mount Yarrahapinni.

“And then there’s number 16, which is the longest par-4 on the course, which is dead straight, out of bounds left and water on the right,” Zirkler says.

***

Macksville GC is a nine-hole course and has a management agreement in which Nambucca Heads Island Golf Club run the day-to-day operations so that the board can focus on strategic ideas.

Early in 2024, well before the great flood, the club received a grant to raise the greens and the tees around the bottom half of the
golf course.

South West Rocks remains tree-lined but, post-Alfred, sight lines have opened up on several holes. PHOTO: Supplied.

“So they barely got touched by the water, which was good,” Zirkler says. “And those tees were fine, too. The more traditional parts of the golf course probably suffered a little more with some springs coming through the soil that weren’t there previously.”

But it bounced back quickly, according to Zirkler, who says “the beauty of the layout is that, they can run a variation of nine holes”.

“When it first came back, we created a routing of a four-hole course. Then five holes, six holes. Then nine holes again. We were just trying to make sure we could get people around. We had carts on pretty much the entire time.”

Again, the volunteers came in droves, with a core group of five or six who put in 20 hours a week.

If Zirkler were describing the course to a travelling golfer, he’d talk about the openness of the routing, the “fantastic Tifdwarf greens” and the ease of access.

“Any day of the week, anytime, there’s accessibility. And I’d probably give a little plug to the kitchen there, too. In fact, both it and the Island’s kitchen, they’re probably the best places to eat in either town,” Zirkler says.

***

Even before the great flood of May 2025, Bellingen GC had gone into voluntary administration. Too many days lost to rain, along with “significant poker machine payouts,” according to local television broadcaster, NBN, were among factors cited for costs outweighing income.

There came a white knight. Late in 2025, Zirkler, along with Bellingen’s board and chartered accountants and liquidators, Clout Advisory, approved the sale to a private consortium of local pub owners, Luke Sullivan and Matt Rabbidge, of the Mosey On Inn group. The pair’s pitch was to create a community space.

“And these guys, I just met with them, they’re so keen to promote the club as a community facility, even though they’re privately owned. Some of the stuff they’re doing is so good. It’s ridiculous what they’re doing,” Zirkler says.

One of those things is to rename the place the Loyal Bellingen Golf Club. They also employed the former head chef of Agrarian Kitchen, an award-winning eatery in New Norfolk, Tasmania.

“They reopened the golf course just before Christmas,” Zirkler says. “It’s a great little golf course. Nine holes, just at the foot of the Great Dividing Range. It’s been through a fair few floods in the past, which is why they ended up closing. They just ran out of cash. But it’s great little track, fun for everyone.”

Today the club is proudly “pokies-free”, open from Thursday to Sunday, and a family-friendly community hub. The golf course is open to visitors seven days a week.

***

Coffs Harbour GC was set to host the Australian Ladies Classic in August of last year when Severe Tropical Cyclone Alfred turned up on the NSW Mid North Coast. Though they only copped the tail of what so hammered South West Rocks, the damage was “pretty brutal and flooded the course,” according to club professional, Matt Allan. “The course was obliterated.”

Today it’s like Alfred never happened.

“We’re pretty good now,” Allan says. “The club has been great over the years. We’ve had a lot of good board members and directors who’ve put solid plans in place, with many of the funds reinvested back into the course.

RIGHT: The 9th green at Emerald Downs. PHOTO: Supplied.

“The drainage, cart paths and other infrastructure have really improved the place out of sight. It’s also helped protect it against those poor weather situations, which we get a lot of because of the Great Dividing Range and how close it is to the ocean here. It’s like a little bowl. When we get weather from a certain direction it just gets stuck here, so it can get extremely wet and cold.

“The club identified that and put a lot of time, effort, resources and capital into drainage and things like that. So, we were only really out of action, on and off, for about a week.”

Today it’s as good as he’s ever seen it, Allan says. “Matt Duff was employed as a greenkeeper here and Justin Sheehan before him. They’re both very good greenkeepers. They’ve been working up to improving the course.

“Matt has done an outstanding job. We’re starting to get couch everywhere now, basically. The fairways and roughs are all couch; Matt can do different step patterns in the rough and make it a bit more brutal. It just looks stunning.

“We’ve also rebuilt the 18th green, which was always a bit of an issue, and that’s come up a treat as well.”

Coffs Harbour is 27 holes with three nine-hole courses – The Lakes, East Lakes and West Lakes. These can be played in various 18-hole combinations. Asked to name his favourite hole, Allan risks member wrath.

“This might be contentious because people hate teeing off on them, but I think two of the starting holes now, 10 and 19, are just stunning,” Allan says.

“I think 10 [par-4 for men, par-5 for ladies] is one of the best golf holes anywhere in the world. You could put that hole anywhere, on any course in the world – it’s such a good-looking hole and a great hole to play.”

“And 19 was one of the hardest par threes you’d ever play. The old green was probably 50 years old and had an old drain across it. They rebuilt the entire green area and wrapped the lake around the back of it.

“There are multiple tee options now. The ladies play it as a par-4 and the men as
a par-3. It can play anywhere from about 180–190 metres for the men, right down to around 130m, and there are so many different pin placements.”

Go Mid-North

Ordered for a drive south to north, here are 13 courses to play on a NSW Mid-North Coast golfing safari.

Forster Tuncurry Golf Club

Strand St, Forster NSW

(02) 6554 6799

forstertuncurrygolf.com.au

Taree RSL and Golf Club

121 Wingham Road, Taree NSW

02 6539 4000

clubtaree.com.au/golf

Wauchope Country Club

24 King St, Wauchope NSW

(02) 6585 3020

wauchopecountryclub.com

Port Macquarie Golf Club

698 Ocean Dr, Port Macquarie NSW 2444

(02) 6582 0409

portmacquariegolf.com.au

Emerald Downs

67 Emerald Dr, Port Macquarie NSW

(02) 6582 6120

emeralddowns.com.au

Kempsey Golf Club

330 Macleay Valley Way,
South Kempsey NSW

(02) 6562 6291

kempseygolfclub.com.au

South West Rocks Country Club

2 Sportmans Way, South West Rocks NSW

(02) 6566 6252

rockscountryclub.com.au

Macksville Country Club

Wallace St, Macksville NSW

(02) 6568 1400

facebook.com/macksvillecountryclub

Nambucca Heads Island Golf Club

Stuart Island, Nambucca Heads NSW

(02) 6569 4111

facebook.com/IslandGolfClub

Loyal Bellingen Golf Club

1172 Waterfall Way, Bellingen NSW

(02) 6655 1312

bellingengolfclub.com

Bonville Golf Resort

28 N Bonville Rd, Bonville NSW

1300 722 444

bonvillegolf.com.au

Sawtell Golf Club

55 Bayldon Rd, Sawtell NSW

(02) 6653 1006

sawtellgolfclub.com.au

Coffs Harbour Golf Club

Earl St, Coffs Harbour NSW

(02) 6652 3244

coffsharbourgolfclub.com.au