Tennis and Wine Weekend at Chateau Elan (April 11-13)

Start Date:

2025-04-11

End Date:

2025-04-13

Registration Deadline:

Join the Cliff Drysdale Tennis team for a tennis and wine weekend at Chateau Elan, located just outside of Atlanta. This unique camp will bring you the ultimate tennis experience where you can relax and unwind while playing tennis like never before. ​The weekend includes 8 hours of tennis instruction and play, a private wine tour and tasting at the award-winning winery, and luxury accommodations for 2 nights. This tennis and wine weekend is designed for players at the 3.0-5.0 level. If you are not sure where you fall in this range, we can discuss your experience level individually and determine if the camp is a good fit! We will focus on doubles specific drills to help improve your match play. This is a coed camp for individuals, couples, or groups. Participants will work with all of our pros and will have the opportunity to hit with many different players.

Rates Start at:

$1145+tax/person Double Occupancy
$1145+tax/person Double Occupancy
*Pricing varies on select dates.

THIS JUST IN

Pickleball is the fastest-growing sport in the United States, and California has quietly become one of the most exciting states in the country to play it.
The luxury sports vacation has evolved. Travelers are no longer content to spend a week in a beach chair. They want mornings of competitive drills, afternoons of doubles, and evenings of farm-to-table dining with a mountain view.
Few states in America have cultivated such a storied, year-round tennis culture, and fewer still can claim a concentration of world-ranked resorts like the Palmetto State.
Tucked directly among the vines at Le Logis, two private pickleball courts sit within the private luxury estate in the heart of France’s Cognac region.
Dinking in the Vines
There is a certain breed of tennis player who cannot be stopped by the weather, and the debate over winter tennis in Florida vs. summer tennis in New England resorts is one they live rather than argue.