11 Ironclad Golf Travel Tips for the 2025 Season

No one like pain. And there are no organs than the brain.
Thanks to its many touted gifts of cognitive function – thinking, reasoning, feeling, breathing – the brain has the same incredible ability forget. When an unpleasant stimulus occurs, the brain will do its best to avoid experiencing it. Typically, the selection mechanism is amnesia.
For the most part, the painful moments of my life are mundane: Leave fries in the laundry, accidentally washed a red dress with white, or put the performance fabric in the dryer. (For Type B people in Type A families, laundry is a common area of pain.) But in some cases, lessons from these painful moments are real opportunities to learn – organizing hackers, important lessons, ways to navigate high stressful ways to keep my salary pink – I accidentally chose to forget about pink.
One of my favorite podcasts, Linger Fantasy Football Showa genius method has been developed to do precisely this spiritual index. In an episode that has become an annual tradition, hosting Danny Kelly, Danny Heifetz and Craig Horlbeck, every fantasy football season ends commemorate Tattoo – or painful lessons they will remember in the second year. This episode is the wink of the 2000 Christopher Nolan movie, in which the main character tortured by amnesia is his autobiographical message, but it is also used as a kind of mea culpa For the audience, it is an opportunity to learn from personal pain.
I learned unusual painful lessons from golfers in 2025. Over the past six months, I have spent most of my time on the journey, chasing the best golf stories in the United States (often with golf clubs). I spent the morning at Jim Nantz’s backyard 3 par and the afternoon at the night at the Barnyard storage facility in Arnold Palmer and the cliffside pole 3 track. I’ve submitted the story from a trailer with suspicious heating and an apartment in the middle with suspicious plumbing and suspicious WiFi. Along the way, I’ve picked up something about travel, golf and life, and I think that might help some people get home. Therefore, by spirit commemorate Here are 11 lessons you should know, considering tattoos.
My 11 golfs commemorate Tattoos for 2025
1. You can survive less than you think
I found a lot of travelers – especially golf Travelers – Become a victim of a kind of travel anxiety: They are worried that they won’t have the necessary clothes/club/equipment, so they overpack to cover all situations.
If I learned a lesson from five years of golf trip, it is that you can survive Distant Less than you think. Never forget about belts, toothbrushes, socks and underwear. Everything else? You might be able to cut the packaging list in half and survive without anyone noticing.
Was that helpful? Neutral basics, such as white shoes and non-colored shirts and pants for men (I like Buck Mason), these looks can be swapped interchangeably!
2. Your golf bag weighs more than you think
I might actually be in mine forehead, Because this might be the only way to effectively remind my idiot lizard brain that the golf bag checked is not a permission to pack unlimited extra clothing and shoes.
Here’s the reality: With your bag, some golf balls and a pair of spikes, your travel bag should weigh 35 pounds. Most airlines impose a strict 50 pound limit on luggage (23 kg if you travel through Europe). That’s not a lot of space!
(I’m also struggling to think about the next time I bring a half-court golf club to reduce the weight of my luggage, but can’t decide if that makes me an incredibly fashionable person.)
3. Leave space to get items you get on the go
But Jamesyou might be thinking, If your golf bag weighs 35 pounds, that means you still have 15 pounds of other things. Yes, it’s true, but do you know how easy it is to add 15 pounds of shoes, clothes or drone equipment to a golf bag? (Very simple!)
And do you know how easy it is to do these things without knowing them Exit Flying, ignoring the possibility that you might get souvenirs or souvenirs from new, distant golf destinations? What do you think Difficult and Awkward When you are in front of a long and winding luggage line in a crowded airport, can you find other places to store newly discovered luggage weights? And do you know how luggage handlers use orange “Heavy” Tags as a license to allow your schoolbag to reach a predetermined location?
No, you don’t. So be smart, bring your golf bag (which should be the lightweight stand listed below), three golf balls, an umbrella and two pairs of shoes (a pair of golf nails, a better pair of basic white shoes).
Ping 2025 Hoofer Lite Stand Bag
This long-time popular carry-on bag offers new color schemes and lively patterns. It has a stacked pocket configuration that makes it easier to access and has a large ball pocket in 9. A four-way top has been reconfigured to improve club organization and easier handling. It also has an innovative bottom that improves club demolition by directing the club to the right segment and keeping the club part open while carrying.
$245 from Fairway Jockey
View Product
4. You need less clothes than you think
Here is my (now and forever) official packaging list in the UK’s seven-day open championship:
- 3-4 pairs of pants
- 3 polo shirts
- Insulated waterproof jacket
- 2-3 pieces sweatshirts/performance sweaters (different weights)
- 2-3 Performance fabric T-shirt (for up or down dressing).
- Middle-level Q-ZIP
- Raincoat and umbrella
- 9 pairs of underwear
That’s it! In Ireland or Scotland, you don’t need these seven days. you Accustomed to More than that. If you do this, it means your gears cannot be layered and should be replaced.
5. You need to enter the world
I’m not a gatekeeper, but if I were a gatekeeper, global entries would be the first thing I’d hide from the public. If you fly more than twice a year, please choose no To get global, I will always judge you to be mentally weak and mildly sadistic – that’s what I feel charitable!
6. You should never pack a toilet bag…
A few years ago, I realized a dozen or so small objects that would usually be reorganized between my toilet bag and medicine cabinet, which took me away from my impressive sanity.
Finally, after so much invasive thinking, I had enough. I went to Amazon, invested about $100 and bought the entire daily toilet series duplicate. result? I have the comfort of home everywhere (my usual electric toothbrush, cologne, moisturizer, etc.) and I never worry about leaving something behind.
(If you think I’m crazy about it, please (very good) introduce the news to james.colgan@golf.com.)
7. Always travel in two separate IDs
I have a friend who we will call “Connor” (because that’s his legal name). Connor lost his wallet on a recent golf trip and learned that it was very difficult/impossible to get a “rush to” passport or second form of identity to a location even in Jeff Bezos’s America.
Connor was in trouble, his passport was lost in mail to the airport in Detroit, and his wallet was on his way back to New York. He can Detailed TSA searches for an empty night in DTW, but his life will be much easier (his safety line (and his safety route is much shorter), and the second form of ID is hidden in his backpack. The list of TSAs in acceptable form of ID forms is surprisingly comprehensive and can save you real headaches in the event of a disaster.
8. SPF, brother
It doesn’t sound like your mom, but I recently learned that SPF is the only product approved by the FDA as “anti-aging”. And, even if you don’t care about porcelain leather, as long as golf enjoys golf outdoors and during the day, sunscreen will continue to be a lovely product. The key is to get good stuff close to (but not exceed) the TSA liquid limit. Here is a couple I’ve tried and liked, but anything SPF is enough to fix the problem.
La Roche Posay Antihelios Facial Sunscreen SPF 60
The gold standard.
Tanning sunscreen
Great product all over the place, but this invisible gel is perfect for golf bags.
9. Stiff arms
I was surprised to learn from a few friends that stiff weapons were not considered a necessary part of golf trips. They seem to me as valuable and necessary as any luggage.
Speaking of luggage: I traveled with a Victorian Oxygenator devoutly Beautiful Of course it is indestructible, I am a Patagonia backpack Completely Of course it is indestructible. They cost more than your standard issued rollers, travel bags and backpacks, but today’s headaches are better than some tomorrow.
10. airtags
Just like a defibrillator or an epi pen no way Leaving home without any.
OK, obviously the bet here is lower. But for only $25, your inner peace is worth the expense.
Apple Airtag
It is a must for any air traveler.
11. Talking about lost luggage…
In any case, you should never have a brief connection at Heathrow and expect to have a plane appear with your luggage.
I’ve seen enough horror stories, read enough angry tweets, and usually experienced a bad enough atmosphere for golf industry members who were trapped in victims of these diseases and they spoke to the subject with absolute authority. If you see a flight, stay away.
James Colgan
Golf.comEdit
James Colgan is Golf news and writes stories for websites and magazines. He manages the media verticals of popular microphones, golf, and leverages his camera experience on the brand platform. Before joining golf, James graduated from Syracuse University, during which time he was a caddie scholarship recipient (and Astute looper) from Long Island, where he came from. He can be contacted at james.colgan@golf.com.



