| Grand buffets: How to gorge on golf without exploding your budget |
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The six courses at The Landings combine the water, sand and marshland that are characteristic of Low Country layouts.
At a relatively mild $50,000, membership in the six private golf clubs at The Landings on Skidaway Island in Georgia is one-third the tariff at The Cliffs. And because some homes in the 25 year old community require a little bit of updating, real estate prices are quite reasonable. (Note: I helped a couple find a handsome home on a green at The Landings last year and am working with another couple who plan a second visit to the
The golf courses in LandMar communities may lack some of the panache of exclusivity at The Cliffs and Reynolds Plantation, but they more than make up for it in comparative savings. For a modest initiation fee and reasonable dues, members of one LandMar club can expand their club membership to multiple other high-quality courses (only a few, though, are private). For example, membership in the private Osprey Cove Club, in the St. Marys, GA, community of the same name, opens up for play a number of other clubs managed by Hampton Golf, a Jacksonville, FL company with which LandMar (and Crescent Communities) maintain an affiliation. Full golf membership at Osprey Cove is just $15,000 for the nice Mark McCumber designed course, with dues an ultra reasonable $4,000 per year.
The Barefoot Resort You won’t find the designs of Greg Norman, Davis Love III, Tom Fazio and Pete Dye clustered inside any community but one, the Barefoot Resort in Myrtle Beach. The resort has been in the news the last week, and not because it wanted to be –- brushfires consumed some parts of the courses and more than 60 homes at Barefoot. According to Barefoot officials, however, the only damage to the courses, other than a few burned spots, were the wooden bridges that traversed some of the layouts’ marshland. Things are returning to normal now, normal being an active set of resort courses open to most anyone staying on premises or in local hotels. Only the Pete Dye course, which requires a separate membership ($60,000) from the other three courses’ $20,000 fee, pretends to any kind of privacy (the club refers to itself as “semi-private”). To join Barefoot, which boasts about 1,250 members, just 200 of them full-time residents, you must be a property owner. For the time being, the developer is waiving any initiation fee with the purchase of a new property. The only requirement is $125 in monthly dues, which is rather modest for such name designer golf.
Myrtle Beach and Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail
Of course, the most reasonable approach to buffet golf would be to buy a home in a golf rich area -– say Pinehurst, Myrtle Beach or along the Robert Trent Jones Trail in Alabama –- and pay as you go. By taking the “supermarket” approach to golf, you skip initiation fees and dues and get to play as many as 110 courses, as is the case along the 90-mile stretch of Myrtle Beach. That works out to a different course every day for about four months. And with the purchase of one of those ubiquitous golf passes, like the Myrtle Beach Passport ($39) or the Robert Trent Jones Trail Card ($39.95), the discounts are substantial. By my rough calculations, you could play 120 rounds per year along the Jones Trail for the cost of the annual $6,000 dues at The Cliffs.
Members of any LandMar community golf club in the Jacksonville area can play the splendid, links-like Palmer designed North Hampton for just a $25 cart fee.
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| Wednesday, 29 April 2009 04:36 | |||
| Last Updated on Wednesday, 29 April 2009 12:40 |
