foundersclubholewithmanypotbunkers.jpg
Pot bunkers at The Founders Club appear easy to get into and tough to get out of...


    You would think that the Myrtle Beach area needs another new golf course like the U.S. needs another Presidential candidate.   After more than a dozen course closures along the Grand Strand over the last five years, the result of rising real estate prices and brutal competition among too many golf courses, things have finally settled down.  Indeed, we have noticed that green fees are up and choice tee times for the busy March/April season are spoken for already.  That is not great news for bargain-seeking golfers but a boon to the stability of the local golf scene.
    Yet the Classic Golf Group, which runs a handful of mid-level courses in the area, took advantage of the distress of the Strand's southernmost

The pot bunkers appear to have been made by meteorites.

course and bought the venerable Sea Gull Golf Club two years ago and announced a total makeover.  After a severe drought this past summer forced the new owners to suspend plans to open in September, the course is now set to open next month.  From my drive around the Founders Club today, patient local and visiting golfers will be well compensated.  The course is in great shape and the re-design by Thomas Walker, a member of Gary Player's architecture firm, has taken great advantage of the existing lakes and wooded areas, and added some dramatic and well-placed bunkers.  A lot of dirt appears tofoundersclubgreenwithmanypotbunkers.jpg have been pushed around to create the elevated and severely contoured green complexes, and a lot of sand trucked in to create wide expanses of sawgrass-punctuated waste bunkers.  At the old Sea Gull, you could roll your ball onto most greens; those days are now over.  Cost of the redesign is estimated at $7 million, but because of the delayed opening, the true cost is probably considerably higher.
    Sea Gull opened originally in 1970 in a neighborhood of mostly modest homes that, today, sell in the low to mid six figures.  Many cart paths on the course cross neighborhood streets.  This is not a planned community by any means, and the styles, condition and prices of the homes run the gamut.  A small (1,500 square foot) home on Hill Drive that backs up to the course is listed at $245,000.  At the other end of the golf course, and the market, a 6,500 square foot ranch is listed for $789,000.  There are plenty of homes for sale in between.  Unless you have your heart set on private club membership, you could purchase the Myrtle Beach Golf Passport for just $39 a year and play The Founders, Pawleys Plantation (across the highway), Heritage (just north), Caledonia and True Blue (both within five minutes) at significant discounts.
    The new Founders clubhouse is small but more than ample for a daily fee course.  The large practice green is just behind the first tee.  The Best Western chain purchased the adjacent motel last year and has spruced it up in anticipation of the buzz about The Founders and the expected number of package golfers arriving this spring.  The ninth hole, whose green is just in front of the hotel and parallel to Highway 17, is a doozy of a par 5.  From the blue tees, which are suggested for the 5 to 10 handicapper, the narrow hole plays 534 yards.  After foundersclub18th.jpga drive down the center, the second shot must be played to a landing strip of grass that is no wider than 25 yards, with water all along the left and trees, and a local street, on the right.  The wedge approach is to a severely tilted green that is surrounded by bunkers that appear to have been formed by meteorites.  It is a hole more fitting for an 18th, although The Founders' finishing hole is no slouch either, a short par 4 surrounded by sand.  The par 3s are all impressive, one in particular with a false front that slopes down to a pond in front.  Another hole, a par 4, features a split fairway; between the short grass strips is a humped area of Bermuda rough featuring some of the smallest pot bunkers I've ever seen.  The only way out of them is sideways.
    The Founders Club, 7829 Ocean Highway (Route 17), Pawleys Island, SC.  Opens for play in February.  Phone:  800-Tee-Offs.  Web site:  ClassicGolfGroup.com.  Men's tees...Black: 7007 yards, Rating 74.1, Slope 139.  Blue:  6,708, 72.8,134.  White:  6,394, 71.1, 129.  Ladies tees...Gold:  5,506, 72.4, 133.  Red: 4,805, 68.1, 114.

foundersclubpar3overwater.jpg

The par 3s I saw were all-carry affairs over water or sand, sometimes both.

thereserve5thholefromtee.jpg

To have a decent chance at par on the tough 5th hole at The Reserve, a drive down the left side is essential.   

   

    Greg Norman designs golf courses the way he plays them - brawny and all or nothing affairs that show little sensitivity to the needs of double-digit handicappers.  Playing from shorter tees doesn't really help much when deep bunkers and hazards snuggle up to large and significantly contoured greens.
    But a mellow Norman design can provide quite a reasonable challenge, as we found on New Year's Day at the private Reserve at Litchfield Beach, a 1998 Norman design on the South Strand of Myrtle Beach.  The Reserve is one of just a handful of private courses along the golf rich Grand Strand and among the three best, all on the south end.  The others include the Pete Dye designed DeBordieu and Tom Fazio's design for Wachesawthereserveclubhouse.jpg Plantation, both of which might be surprised - along with the Members Club at Grand Dunes and the Surf Club in North Myrtle Beach - that The Reserve's web site calls it "the only exclusive golf club on the Grand Strand."  
    Price points for homes at The Reserve fit nicely between the other two, with handsomely designed single homes on ample lots starting in the mid six figures.  Prices at DeBordieu Colony, which includes some seven-figure homes on and near the ocean, average about 10% higher than The Reserve.  Wachesaw, like The Reserve to the west of Route 17, the main thoroughfare through the Grand Strand, presents homes that begin in the $400s and move up to the $1 million+ mark for the larger lots on the Waccamaw River.
    The Reserve's operators showed some restraint by not over-seeding the fairways for the winter, and to my mind, that strategy worked to the course's advantage.  Rather than the tufts and inconsistent growth of fill-in winter grasses, the dormant fairway Bermuda grass was as tight as during the warmer months, although with a little rain in prior days, tee shots did not roll far past their landing areas.  The greens were near flawless, especially for a January, but the grass mowers were not out on New Year's morning so they lacked a little speed.  Our hosts assured us that earlier in the week, the putting surfaces had been slick.  I believe it.
    Greens were enormous and crowned in some places.  Norman has done a wonderful job of channeling Donald Ross around the greens.  Misplaced approach shots typically find the depths of a swale and require either a delicate chip shot or a long putt from up to 15 yards off the green.  We were impressed that even during the winter, putting from well off the greens was not only possible but, in many cases, preferable.
    I can't say that any holes at The Reserve are etched in my mind forever, but some stand out.  The best was also the #1 handicap hole on the course, the par 4 5th, a dogleg right that plays to a modest 395 yards.  A lone tall pine on the left side of the fairway forces a slight draw off the tee.  Pushed drives to the right side of the fairway make it essential to fade your approach shot over two sod-walled bunkers that guard the front and right sides of the green. 

    The par 3s all play over waste bunkers or marshland, but the large greens are fairly easy to hit. (if difficult to putt, especially when they are cut to roll fast).  The 17th, at 175 yards, is all carry to a large contoured green that makes being below the hole almost mandatory to avoid three-putt possibilities.  For a hole-by-hole description, click here for The Reserve's web site.
    The Reserve offers two levels of golf membership.  For an initiation fee of $32,500 and dues of around $350 per month, full golf members play unlimited golf and have the run of the club.  A special "Golf Membership" is geared toward second-home owners and provides 26 rounds of golf annually for an initiation fee of $22,000 and dues up to $200.  Members have a huge practice range and green at their disposal, and the clubhouse, while not huge, is well appointed.  The greeting at the bag drop make guests feel like members.

thereserve17thhole.jpg

Par 3s at The Reserve are all-carry affairs.  The 17th forces a high soft shot to an undulating green.  Placing your tee shot below the hole is best.