Wretched excess:  What $750K can bring you

    “What we’re creating here, we think, is a model for the 21stt-century golf club,” says Robert Rubin, creator of The Bridge club on Long Island, in today’s Wall Street Journal
    Let us hope not.
    Membership in The Bridge costs $750,000 and $20,000 a year in dues.  For that, you get spur-of-the-moment access to the Rees Jones-designed course since membership will cap out at just 150. (Hurry, there are 21 more spots left!) 
    Mr. Rubin founded the club in large measure to provide himself and his hedge fund and celebrity millionaire friends with an unpretentious environment in which to wear their golf caps backward, if they want.  Sounds like some municipal courses we know where you could play every day for 100 years and not spend $750,000, or $20,000 a year.

50% off Mount Vintage memberships

    The developers of Mount Vintage Plantation, the golf- and horse-oriented community in Aiken, SC, are running a 50 percent off membership sale for anyone who purchases one of their remaining lots.  Full golf initiation is $25,000 currently.
    Mount Vintage also provides an a la carte approach to membership fees.  Whereas other communities typically offer use of all their facilities for a “full golf” membership fee, Mount Vintage gives its members choices after the payment of the initiation.  For example, dues for a full-family golf membership are $205 per month; add the other activities, such as tennis and the fitness center, and the dues are $275.  Dues for everything but golf are $100 monthly (after a $1,000 initiation fee).
    Mount Vintage also offers what it calls a “permanent membership fee,” which gives members the right to transfer their membership in the club to the eventual purchasers of their homes.  The one-time cost is $2,000, which strikes us as a fair insurance premium.  If the potential purchaser is a golfer, built-in membership could mean the difference between sale or no sale.
    For more information, contact Mount Vintage Sales Agent Geoff Wright at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

    Savannah, GA's Wilmington Island Club has come a long way, and yet perhaps it has a guilty conscious about its past.  What else could explain that its scorecard makes no mention of its legendary designer, Donald Ross?
    Built in 1927 during the heyday of U.S. golf architecture, Wilmington Island's design has been "updated" a few times since.  We have no way of knowing whether the improvements corrected some deficiencies in the master's original design or was just some latest owner putting his stamp on the place.  It wasn't unusual for Ross designs to be tinkered with in the ‘50s and ‘60s before everyone's consciousness was raised about the greatness of his layouts.  We did find strong echoes of Ross at the Wilmington Island Club in its generously sized fairways, although some trees and bunkers were placed strategically in the hitting zones, making shaped drives necessary on a number of holes.  
    Ross' characteristically crowned greens have been shaved over time, yet the false fronts and encroaching sand bunkers and swales at greenside imply that Willard Byrd and Clyde Johnston, who renovated the course in the ‘60s and ‘80s respectively, were compelled to leave a number of Ross features.  The course was in nice condition, and although it welcomes public play, it has an active membership; on the day we played, the tennis courts and pool were filled.  It felt like a private club, and we wouldn't be surprised if the rumors we heard that it might go that way in the next few years turn out to be true.
    Housing stock in the adjacent neighborhoods ranges from early 20th Century to a renovated historic hotel and adjacent new luxury development called Wilmington Plantation.  In its heyday, The Oglethorpe Hotel, which was built within months of the opening of the golf club, was the playground of celebrities, including Jackie Gleason, Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra.   It is in view from a number of holes on the course, and would be a convenient place to live and belong to the club.  However, there are hints that the property has had some issues getting off the ground.  Proceed at your own risk but, by all means, if you are in the Savannah area, play Wilmington Island Club.

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Some tee shots at Wilmington Island Club, like this one at the 8th, require a controlled draw or fade to stay out of trouble and in position for an approach shot.