Toughest golf course in the world

         In case you missed it, CNN carried a charming story about the only golf course in Afghanistan and its indefatigable owner, Mohammed Afzal Abdul (and, on some days, its only player).  The course, just outside of Kabul, is all hardscrabble and sand, with a little oil mixed in for the putting surfaces.  It has survived challenges no golf course in America has ever had to face, including the Russian and Taliban armies. 

        Words of advice to the owner of the course, now that he has been on CNN worldwide:  Copyright and put your "Kabul Golf Club" cap up for sale on eBay.  You'll make enough to plant grass greens.  Watch the CNN piece by clicking here.   Read a related article at CNN's web site (click here)

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ameliaislandocean6thfromtee.jpg

The 6th hole of the Ocean Course is one of 72 fine golf holes at the Amelia Island Resort.

Another golf resort files Chapter 11

        Amelia Island Resort, a perfectly nice golf and ocean resort near Jacksonville, FL, never garnered quite the attention as a buddy golf destination as did its northern competitors of Hilton Head Island and Myrtle Beach, nor the upscale cachet of a Kiawah or Sea Island.  When I visited the resort, I thought its golf courses well designed and laid out, but their turf pockmarked by uncaring traveling golfers who fixed neither divots nor ball marks.  I also thought the service around the bag drop was chaotic, the attitudes of the staff a bit brusque and the practice green between the clubhouse and first tee at one of the courses a joke -- enough room there for about four golfers at a time.

        When times are good and golf resorts crowded, such niggling criticisms don't much affect the revenue stream.  But that has changed since 2006, and this week, Amelia Island Resort's owners ran out of time, at least under its current organization.  The group filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which gives it some breathing room to reorganize.  A local investor group reportedly is injecting money into the venture.  Here's hoping Amelia comes back healthy and stronger after a bit of pruning.

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One rock forward, hundreds back

         We wrote here a few days ago about a recent rockslide near Asheville, NC, that took out a portion of Interstate 40.  As if on cue, work crews in Tennessee were removing one large boulder from Highway 64 this week, and videotaping their work, when tons more of rocks and trees slid onto the roadway.  Fortunately, no one was hurt, and the boulder crushing machine was safely removed before it was pulverized.  It makes for compelling video, which you can watch by clicking here.
        The Internet is a great way to do research on golf community homes.  It can provide a lot of basic information about communities before you visit.  Pricing information, of course, is most helpful; if you can't afford to live in a place, then why waste your time with further investigation, no matter how great the golf community looks or how good the golf course seems.

        I scan golf community related websites often and subscribe to some newsletters that provide information about golf communities.  One I particularly like is the Golf Course Home Network, but I take what I read there with a lump of salt.  Like virtually all media devoted to golf communities, Golf Course Home Network shamelessly promotes its clients' developments.  Every reference to them is great, and they all sound like paradise and great investments.  Of course, in reality, none are perfect.  (Note:  We have chosen a different model here, never charging fees to anyone -- developer or homebuyer -- in order to maintain our objectivity.  We go so far as to pay our green fees when we play a golf community course.)

        Golf Course Home Network, which provides specific information about communities and wraps it all in a positive package, is typically accurate and timely.  I was surprised, therefore, to note last week an unusual faux pas.  The Network's newsletter and website announced that an upscale condo development in Charleston, SC, called Reverie on the Ashley River, was offering, with the purchase of some of its condos, free golf memberships at the exclusive and expensive Briar's Creek on nearby John's Island.  I visited Briar's Creek earlier this year and was impressed with the course, the clubhouse and the elegant but understated nature of the place.  Briar's Creek had just dropped its initiation fees to a still robust $100,000, so my curiosity was piqued by the Reverie offer.

        But when I went to the Reverie website, I saw no mention of the offer.  I love a good investigation, and I decided to conduct a Google search for further information.  I found an August press release announcing the free membership deal -- that expired nine days before the Golf Course Home Network newsletter arrived in my inbox.  Alas, too good to be true.

        As Emily Latella of Saturday Night Live fame used to say after being advised of a malaprop, "Never mind."