Sterling Route — built for golf trips

For Golf Groups

Two Foursomes.
One Van.
A Weekend Worth Remembering.

Eight guys. Eight sets of clubs. One cargo carrier. Friday afternoon you leave South Florida. Sunday evening you come home different.

The Trip

Here's how the weekend goes.

Friday Afternoon

The cargo carrier is loaded with all eight bags. Everyone meets at one spot — no caravan, no three separate departure texts. One person drives down. The other seven settle in. The mini fridge is stocked. The Ryder Cup highlights are already on the 32" screen. Someone is giving a scouting report on Black versus Blue. You're still in Palm Beach County and the weekend is already good.

Friday Evening

You arrive at Streamsong with enough light for a twilight round — or you make a reservation at the clubhouse and do it right. Either way, you're not scattered across three different check-in lines. Everyone is there. The weekend has officially started.

Saturday

First tee, 7am. Two foursomes. Eighteen holes for everyone. Lunch at the turn or back at the lodge. For the ambitious ones — and there's always a couple — another eighteen in the afternoon. Thirty-six holes on one of the best courses in Florida. By dinner, the handicap arguments are already in full swing.

Saturday Evening

A proper dinner. The kind where you don't look at your watch. Everyone tells their version of the day. Someone brings up the shot on 14 that nobody expected. The stories start taking shape — the ones that will still come up years from now.

Sunday Morning

One more round. Fresh legs, renewed confidence, familiar trash talk. After the back nine, bags go back in the carrier. Someone else drives home. The van is quieter now — not because it's less good, but because everyone is full and content and thinking about the same things.

That's not just a golf trip. That's the one they talk about every time someone mentions Streamsong.

The Alternative

How it goes without the van.

Three separate cars. Somebody's bag gets crammed sideways in a trunk designed for groceries. You spend the first nine holes wondering if the shaft is bent.

Everyone arrives at different times. The first hour is just logistics — who's in what room, who drove with who, who's waiting at the bag drop. The trip doesn't really start until Saturday morning. You've already burned Friday night.

By Sunday afternoon, someone's tired, someone's sore, and someone drew the short straw on the drive home. Three hours back to South Florida alone with your thoughts instead of with your group.

You can do better. The van is how.

How It Works

Sterling Route is a self-drive rental. One person in your group drives — you work that out beforehand. Maybe it rotates: one guy takes Friday's run down, a fresh set of hands takes Sunday home. Split eight ways, the van still costs less than three rental cars, and seven people are riding in serious comfort the entire way. Everybody wins. Especially whoever calls shotgun.

What You Get

Built for exactly this trip.

10 seats — 2 foursomes ride together, no one left behind
Cargo carrier compatible — all 8 bags fit, none crammed
Mini fridge — stock it your way the night before
Private commode & sink — no gas station detours
32" TV with Bluetooth & WiFi streaming
Microwave — real food on a long drive
Bench seats fold flat — sleep on the overnight haul to Pinehurst
Self-drive — you set the schedule, the pace, the playlist
Sterling Route exterior

Where People Are Going

South Florida to anywhere worth playing.

These are the drives worth making. We've thought through every one of them.

Streamsong Resort

Bowling Green, FL · 2.5 hrs

Black, Red, and Blue. Three of the best courses in the state, on the same property. The obvious choice for a first big trip. You'll be back.

Cabot Citrus Farms

Ocala, FL · 3 hrs

The new standard for Florida golf. Cabot's first US property. Four courses in the works, already worth the drive. Get there before everyone else does.

Hammock Beach Golf Resort

Palm Coast, FL · 3.5 hrs

The Ocean Course. Atlantic views on most holes, Tom Watson design, and a resort that makes you want to stay an extra day. You probably will.

TPC Sawgrass

Ponte Vedra Beach, FL · 5 hrs

The Stadium Course. You've watched the 17th your whole life. Time to stand on that tee box and find out what you're made of.

Innisbrook Resort

Palm Harbor, FL · 3 hrs

Copperhead Course — home of the Valspar Championship. Four courses on property. If the group is serious about golf, this is your weekend.

Pinehurst No. 2

Pinehurst, NC · 10 hrs

A pilgrimage, not a trip. Ten hours up, ten hours back, 18 holes on the greatest course in America. You take shifts. The bench folds flat. You arrive ready.

The Economics

Do the math. It writes itself.

Eight guys. Streamsong for the weekend.

Three rental cars: $180–$240 each, call it $700. Gas for three vehicles: $180. Resort parking: $90. Total before anyone tees off: nearly $1,000 just to get there and back — in cars that don't fit the bags comfortably and split the group for five hours each way.

Or one Sterling Route. Everyone chips in equally. The bags fit. The group is together. One person drives each direction — you decide who before you leave. Split eight ways, the van lands in the same neighborhood as the rental cars, and the experience isn't in the same zip code.

Same cost. Completely different trip. That's the whole story.

Simple Process

Three steps and you're done.

01

Pick your weekend

Choose the course. Check availability. Hold the dates with a deposit. Lock it in before someone else's group takes your weekend.

02

Sign your rental agreement

Rental agreement sent directly from Sterling Route. Insurance handled through Roamly. Clean, straightforward, protected. Five minutes.

03

Load up and go

Carrier on. Bags in. Fridge stocked. One person drives. Seven people settle in. Best golf trip your group has ever taken.

One More Thing

Stop talking about it.
Book the van.

There's one van. Spring and fall weekends fill up fast. If your group has been saying “we should do Streamsong” for three years, this is the part where you actually do it.

Check Availability