Longtime Lowcountry resident Joel Zuckerman has five books to his credit, and his course reviews, player profiles, essays and features have been seen in more than 100 publications in addition to Hilton Head Monthly, including Sports Illustrated, GOLF, Continental Magazine, Travel & Leisure Golf, SKY Magazine, Golf Connoisseur, Golfweek, Estates West, Millionaire and Golf International, among many others. He has played nearly 700 golf courses around the world.



The Luggage Club is Leading Edge

With sticks in tow, I travel around more in a year than most golfers do in a decade. (This proclamation EXCLUDES members of the PGA Tour, Champions, Nationwide, Hooters, LPGA, Duramed Futures, etc.)
I’ve long been used to dragging my casket-sized travel bag through airports, and upon arrival waiting (praying?) they show up on either the carousel, or at the oversize luggage bin. I’ve generally had decent luck, though of course I’ve had clubs delayed, my travel cover mangled, and in the worst scenario, an entire bag (not just my 14 weapons, but 4 days worth of clothes, two pairs of golf shoes, sunglasses, etc.) never make it out of Cancun, Mexico, and never to be seen again.
Now I’ve found a better way. The Luggage Club (www.theluggageclub.com) will safely and efficiently transport your clubs (or skis, surfboard, etc.) from where you are to where you’re going, and then back again, if you so choose. It’s not free, but in this day and age of airline baggage fees, it’s more affordable than you think. Never mind the convenience and reliability factors, which are the main reasons for availing oneself of this superb service. Here are two others: Say you have a tight airline connection, with plans to play the very day you arrive. If you don’t want to play a premium round with some bedraggled rental set, and aren’t sure the airline’s baggage personnel will get your clubs from the plane you arrived on onto the departing plane before it’s too late, then ship ‘em in advance.
Here’s another: When you ship your sticks home post-trip, and then head to the airport with nothing but a carry-on, you are footloose and flexible. Just last month, after shipping my sticks ahead, and with nothing on my person but an over-shoulder duffel bag, after arriving in Atlanta I jumped on a departing flight that was leaving a full three hours before my scheduled departure. If I had been tied to my 50-pound travel bag like in the old days, and stuck with the Scarlet Letter of a checked baggage claim? Put it this way—it would have made for a long couple of hours meandering from Brookstone, to the Sharper Image, then Cinnabon and the newsstand.
The Vagabond Golfer and The Luggage Club. As Forrest Gump might say, go together like peas and carrots.


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