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The par 5 12th at Red Tail Mountain starts a few stories above the fairway... 

   

    Red Tail Mountain, a two-year old community in a remote area of eastern Tennessee, has hired the Troon golf management company to supervise operations at its golf course.  Red Tail Mountain was one of the most interesting courses I played last year, and one of its par 5s is still seared in my memory.  It featured a four-story high tee, a fairway that was severely humped in the middle, and most unusual lay-up and approach shots.  Entry to the green is over a rock outcropping at right front; behind the green is a sheer two-story cliff that looks as if it will throw long shots back onto the green.  According to the assistant pro at the course, it doesn't work that way; he's hit buckets of balls at the cliff and very few bounce straight back.

    Red Tail, which is located in Mountain City, is about 40 minutes from the attractive mountain community of Boone, NC.  Real estate values currently reflect Red Tail's rural location; combine attractive prices, an intriguing golf course with a dramatic layout, and Tennessee's lack of a state income tax, and Red Tail Mountain has a great shot at success.  The hiring of Troon demonstrates that it is serious about upgrading its golf facilities.  That won't hurt either.

 

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...and gets even "harder" the closer you get to the green. 

  

    Any golfer who has been to Myrtle Beach knows "The Grandaddy."  It is the nickname for Pine Lakes International Golf Club, circa 1927, the oldest course on the Grand Strand and the one with the most tradition.  In its clubhouse in 1954, for example, plans were hatched to initiate Sports Illustrated.  During cold weather rounds, Pine Lakes attendants greeted golfers at one tee box with a cup of chowder.  The course's starters wore kilts and other employees knickers.  None of the 120 courses in the Myrtle Beach area could match Pine Lakes for private, old club and old world atmosphere.
    And then, poof, it all seemed to vanish in a cloud of "progress" when the course closed last November in anticipation of a new housing development and a total rebuild of the layout.  The developers pledged to keep a course on site, albeit a dramatically changed Pine Lakes, but local folks were skeptical, having watched in recent years as a dozen courses in the area closed permanently to accommodate housing.  The threat of a course closure at Pine Lakes ended when the plans of Burroughs & Chapin, the local developers, were approved by the Myrtle Beach City Council.  Those plans included a golf course.
    Today, according to the Myrtle Beach Sun Times, plans to totally change the Pine Lakes course have been shelved, for the most part.  Burroughs & Chapin, with advice from local and national preservationists, decided that the course's National Historic Registry status should be retained, and to do that, only minimal changes could be made to the course.  To accommodate a main road into the new community, only holes 17 and 18 will be rerouted, moved to a wetlands area at the edge of the property, according to the Sun Times.  That could afford some interesting finishing-hole challenges.  Otherwise, Burroughs & Chapin have committed to rehabbing the course in its current configuration, and installing new saline-resistant grass on the greens; Pine Lakes's underground wells have a high salt content, and growing grass on the course's greens had been a perpetual challenge.
    The Grandaddy's clubhouse is also getting a sprucing up.  It and the course are expected to be ready in 2009.