Today I head back north to Connecticut from South Carolina, a solid 16-hour car drive.  It has been a great summer so far, with lots of new golf courses played and the hint that maybe I am starting to get my swing back (the ball is not going dead right off the tee anymore).  Still, standing on the first tee each day, I don't know which golfer will show up, the guy who keeps the ball in play and gives himself a shot at breaking 80, or the spray hitter who is forever chipping  from the muck and mire just to get back to the fairway and have a chance for a one-putt par.  I can hear some of you muttering "Been there, done that."

    A few observations about some of my summer visits.  First, you can't tell the real estate market is in recession by playing golf courses on the Carolinas coast.  More than once, hammering coming for nearby homes under construction interrupted a backswing this summer.   Local real estate agents say that home inventories are way up but that prices have not softened too much.  It is reasonable to assume, though, that as people have problems selling their primary homes up north, the relocation traffic will slow down a little in the southeast.

    Summer is a great time to play in the south...if you can stand the heat.  Prices are way down even at some of the elite public accessible courses.  At Caledonia in Pawleys Island, which is highly rated in Zagat's and the popular golf magazines, we played for $67 per person with the Myrtle Beach Passport card I purchased in July.  The regular fee of $97 is still a bargain for the best conditioned course in Myrtle Beach; in the high season of spring and fall, the fees near $200.  During the summer, we played a course in Georgetown, SC, the Wedgefield Golf Club, for less than $30, and it wasn't bad (certainly worth the money).  The better courses in the Charleston area rarely topped $60, cart included.

    Some courses are sensitive to the heat and provide iced towels and frequent beverage cart service.  Others appear to be doing you a favor by providing water every half dozen holes or so.  Our best advice is to bring a bottle or two of your own water or, better yet, Gator Ade or the like.

    On the drive home, I'll be contemplating all the visits I've made during the last year and half since I started HomeOnTheCourse, our newsletter which reviews golf course communities.  We are still the only objective, unbiased service of its kind.  In this space in the coming weeks, I'll reflect on some of the 80 or so communities I've visited and try to share some lessons learned and rules of the road when looking for golf community property.

    In the meantime, it's on to my longest drive of the summer... 

    When asked to rank their number one physical activity, baby boomers say "walking" or "hiking" substantially more often than golf, tennis or any other recreation.  Golf courses are great places to walk, and the non-golfers who live in golf course communities do so because the cart paths that wind alongside holes and often along rivers, marsh and forests are pleasant places for a hardy stroll.

    But not all courses are walker friendly.  Nearly half the courses in communities we have visited have restrictions on walking the cart paths. Okay before play begins and from an hour or two before sundown; not okay during the hours of play.

    Some of the better amenitized communities, like the Cliffs in the mountains of the Carolinas, have built in miles of hiking trails nowhere near the golf courses.  Some, like Mountain Air outside Asheville, NC, have even hired naturalists to supervise educational walks through the wilderness.  Of course, some of these communities pay for the amenities with higher priced real estate and fees.

    Our advice when you begin considering seriously the purchase of a home in a golf course community is to ask about any restrictions along the course.  Better yet, find a few residents and ask them whether any rules are strictly enforced.  At our summer course in Pawleys Island, SC, strollers are frowned upon during play.  Yet plenty of our fellow residents do it, and we haven't heard of any incident that spoiled a good walk.

 

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A  warning stenciled on the cart paths at Coosaw Creek Golf Club in Summerville, SC.