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Taiwan's golf culture runs deep in Taoyuan — the city that doubles as the island's aviation gateway holds more courses per capita than almost anywhere else in the country, a legacy of the Japanese colonial era's introduction of the game and the postwar economic boom that made membership at a private club a mark of status. Luzhu District sits in Taoyuan's flatter, more industrial western reaches, where golf courses have long operated as green sanctuaries amid warehouses, logistics hubs, and the sprawl connecting the airport corridor to the broader metro region.
The "A & B Course" designation is a naming convention common to larger Taiwanese golf facilities that developed multiple loops over time, often expanding from an original layout as land and investment allowed. These courses tend to operate as semi-private or member-oriented clubs, with well-maintained fairways reflecting Taiwan's subtropical climate — lush through much of the year, occasionally testing in the humid summer heat.
Taoyuan's position near sea level and the prevailing Pacific weather patterns mean afternoon thunderstorms are a genuine factor from May through September, and the local caddies — a staple of virtually every Taiwanese club — are your best intelligence on how conditions typically shift across the day.
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