Later this month, I will visit the Columbia, SC, golf community Cobblestone Park, a Phoenix attempting to rise from the ashes.  Cobblestone is a former property of Bobby Ginn whose unraveling empire left in its wake undelivered amenities and much property owner angst.  Most of Ginn's communities have been sold or taken over by others, which is especially good news for Cobblestone property owners since The Linger Longer organization is the new steward of the community and putting the finishing touches on a clubhouse that was never built under Ginn.  Linger Longer, a family company with a terrific reputation for its Reynolds Plantation resort and community in Georgia, has also assumed Ginn's property at Laurelmor in the western Carolina mountains and has promised an announcement soon about its plans there.
    Cobblestone Park is intriguing for a few reasons, beyond the positive change of ownership.  The University Club Golf Course,

My upcoming visits include Cobblestone Park in Columbia, SC; Brier's Creek and Daniel Island in Charleston; and Reynolds Plantation in Georgia.  Let me know if you want me to check out anything specifically for you.

designed by P. B. Dye, is the home course of the University of South Carolina golf teams.  Some locals grouse that the surrounding homes, which were added well after the golf course opened in 1995, have ruined the ambience of the layout.  I will be especially conscious of that as I play the course.  The community is just a few miles from a major university town; Columbia is the home of the University of South Carolina and offers an impressive array of big-time collegiate sports, culture and the opportunity for continuing education.  Columbia, which I have visited before, is not the most interesting town in the Carolinas, but it has a nice airport and is a good jumping off point for drives to the mountains or the horse country around Aiken, SC, less than one hour away.  Aiken, by the way, is just across the Savannah River from Augusta, GA, and all golfers know what is held there every April.
    I am especially interested in Cobblestone Park because it seems that current prices there reflect more the tumult of the past than the prospects for the future under Linger Longer.  When I checked the Cobblestone web site today, I noted that some home sites on the golf course are priced as low as $60,000, with homes starting in the $300s.  Those who bought higher priced Ginn Cobblestone lots and homes a couple of years ago cannot be happy, but I want to confirm that those looking for a relatively low entry point in a community with a sound developer at the helm should consider Cobblestone.  If any of my readers want me to do specific research regarding Cobblestone or the city of Columbia, or want me to send a scorecard from the golf course, just send me an email.
    Speaking of Reynolds Plantation, it is at the top of my list for a visit, but I need to carve out enough time to make sure I can inspect, if not play, all its five courses, including a sixth, by Pete Dye, that is under construction.  In the meantime, I am planning visits in the coming weeks to Daniel Island and Brier's Creek, both in the Charleston area.  Tomorrow I make a repeat visit after a couple of years, to the community of Dunes West, in Mt. Pleasant, SC, just a few miles from Charleston.  The Arthur Hills course was in nice shape when I played it two years ago but not as tough as many Hills courses I've encountered.  I have about four more strokes on my handicap index today than I did two years ago; Dunes West may be all I can handle. 

    Look for a review here in the next few days.

    In a stressful economy that is putting many independent golf courses into full-fledged survival mode, some course operators have put aside their competitive natures and pooled their shrinking resources.  Nowhere is this more evident than in the highly competitive Myrtle Beach golf market, where a few dozen golf courses are hoping to sing Happy Trails before too long.
    Taking a page from the famed Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail in Alabama, The Waccamaw Golf Trail on the south end of the Grand Strand in the Pawleys Island area was the first to combine marketing efforts for local golf clubs.  Almost all the dozen courses in thegrandedunesresortclubhouse.jpg group are among the first rank of the Myrtle Beach area's 110 clubs.  Caledonia Golf & Fish Club, for example, ranks highly in "best-of" lists in the Golfweek, Golf Digest and Zagat golf guides.  True Blue, Caledonia's sister course, is also part of the Trail; both were designed by the late Mike Strantz.  The Tom Fazio designed and highly regarded TPC of Myrtle Beach, which has hosted professional tour events, was recently renovated to excellent reviews.  The other courses rounding out the impressive roster are Pawleys Plantation (J. Nicklaus), Heritage (L. Young), Blackmoor (G. Player), Founders Club (T. Walker), River Club (T. Jackson), Litchfield (W. Byrd), The Tradition (R. Garl), Wachesaw East (C. Johnston) and Willbrook Plantation (D. Maples).  Almost all the courses, which are no more than 15 minutes apart, are part of planned residential communities.    

    Recently, 22 courses and an assortment of hotels that straddle the North and South Carolina borders and extend all the way up to Bald Head Island formed the Brunswick Isles Golf Trail.  The roster of courses is sprinkled with a few less-than-stellar layouts but comprises mostly well-regarded tracks, like The Thistle, Leopard's Chase and Tiger's Eye (parts of the Ocean Ridge Plantation community), Tidewater and Bald Head Island, which anchors the northernmost part of the Trail and requires a ferry ride to reach.  In total, the trail spans 60 miles.
    With the north and south ends of Myrtle Beach's Grand Strand now covered with co-marketed golf courses, it is only a matter of time before golf operators in the heart of Myrtle Beach put together a trail mix of their own.  Our pick for candidates for the Heart of Myrtle Beach Golf Trail would be the recently reopened and fully renovated Pine Lakes International, the Grande Dunes Resort course, the four courses at Barefoot Landing, International World Tour, and Kings North at Myrtle Beach National.

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The Thistle Golf Club is one of 22 courses that together comprise the Brunswick Isles Golf Trail north of Myrtle Beach.