Think back to the last time the beauty of a golf course took your breath away, or at the very least made you stop for a minute to bask in the scene. If it was by the sea, discard that one because any course or hole, no matter how good or bad, can look world class and amazing with an ocean view.

Let your thoughts drift away from the ocean to lush strip-cut and undulating fairways – lined with majestic strands of flooded gums as well as vast areas of sub-tropical forest – and punctuated by white sandy bunkers. In the spring, blossoming azaleas and flowering natives add touches of pink, red, white and purple to the colour palette.

If you’re now thinking of Bonville Golf Resort, you’ve been fortunate enough, like me, to experience arguably this country’s most beautiful inland golf course. If you haven’t played Bonville, there’s never been a better time to experience what some are moved to describe as Australia’s Augusta National.

There is some resemblance to the famous home of the Masters Tournament and all credit must go to the designers, Terry Watson and Ted Stirling, whose brief from the original owners was to create a course like that found in Georgia. However, there is only one Augusta.

What Watson and Stirling did was create a distinctly Australian golf course that has some features Augusta is famous for, including great elevation change between tee and green on many holes, holes incorporating natural watercourses, and, of course, the azaleas.

But that is where the similarities begin and end, as Bonville has its own distinct character and memorable features. To achieve that end, improvement and change has been the mantra of the Bonville team since the current owner bought the property from the original Japanese developers in 1999.

There was recognition, almost immediately back in 1999, that Bonville needed some dramatic change if it was to stand alongside the best in this country.

All the greens were soon converted from Penncross bentgrass to the more resilient Bermuda 328 grass, while tall trees shadowing some greens were removed or heavily pruned. The putting surfaces have since thrived and today are excellent to putt on.

One aspect of the layout I have always thought was below par was the bunkering. For a layout in an area that receives good rain annually, some of Bonville’s bunkers would not drain very well and there would be occasions of sand washout on others. This problem has certainly been addressed with all 52 bunkers throughout the course being rebuilt during the past two winters. Each bunker was remodelled with better drainage and bunker mat material installed. Bunker mat is a three-dimensional sand retention and drainage matting, which is laid on the steep slope of bunker faces. The sand is trapped within the open structure of the fibres, allowing the sand to be held in place. Even in heavy downpours, the matting allows water to flow internally to the drainage in the base of the bunker without taking sand with it.

High-quality white bunker sand was then transported in from Queensland’s Sunshine Coast to finish off the hazards and the result, for mine, is first class. The bunker remodelling, with most being made larger or re-shaped to be more visually appealing has, again, improved markedly the experience of what is always an enjoyable and challenging round at Bonville.

And the changes are not going to finish there.

A master-plan has been established for Bonville that proposes 421 homes to be built around the edges of the course, as well as the creation of upgraded resort facilities.

“A great golf course like Bonville would not be complete without a surrounding community of home owners and an expansion of the existing tourism accommodation,” Bonville general manager Brad Daymond says. “The necessary planning approvals are being sought which would permit the development of a beautiful estate to complement the spectacular golf course.”

In the meantime, one of the memorable aspects of playing at Bonville is the quality of its par-5s. Each requires attention to strategic detail where putting your shots in the right position from the tee and in lay-up areas will reap benefits.

The 485-metre 4th is a great driving hole with a saddle-shaped fairway funnelling even slightly off-line shots back to the centre of the mown portion. The aggressive player may consider going for the green in two shots here but it is a shot that must be solid and shaped slightly right-to-left around the dogleg and the wall of flooded gums flanking the fairway. Two fairway traps and a huge swale, both about 60 metres short of the green, are in play and can complicate the errant lay-up.

The slightly shorter, but more challenging, 7th hole is a gem. The view from the elevated tee on this 470-metre par-5 reveals all that stands between you and the hole – tall trees left and right, two fairway traps encroaching on the driving line from the right. You can’t help but have the feeling here that any ball not finding the wide fairway from the tee will be lost for good. It is only a steady descent from the tee down the fairway, which bottoms out at a creek about 75 metres short of the green. From here, the putting surface lies well above you with bunkers left, right and short. This hole asks plenty of questions en route from what to hit from the tee, to where to lay-up for your second or what club you might need to hit the green with your second shot.

Similar questions are posed on Bonville’s iconic closing hole – a 460-metre journey up-and-over a hill between deep strands of towering flooded gums that line the way to the green, that lies just beyond a pond and meandering stream. Standing on the crest of this hill looking down toward the green, with the azaleas in full bloom (remember, only in spring), you can imagine, if just for a moment, a similar view confronting players at the Masters when playing the famous 13th or 15th holes. For many players, there is never any question whether to go for the green in two shots or not. In such a wonderful theatre that the 18th provides, it is hard not to add to the drama by throwing off the shackles and risking a dropped shot or two by playing aggressively.

I was so pleased with what I found at Bonville on my most recent trip there to compile this feature. The resort is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year and it has never looked or played better in two decades.