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Tom Fazio's design at Bright's Creek is the 21st best course in the golf rich state of North Carolina.

 

    I don't promote golf communities at this site; I review them and report news about them.  But some readers may be thinking I am a shill for Balsam Mountain Reserve, the high-end golf community near Waynesville, NC.  I have been writing about it quite a bit lately, but as soon as they stop making news, I will slow down.  Most recently, Balsam Mountain, a Chaffin & Light community, reported the best first quarter sales of any in the mountains and its own personal best in eight years.  Now, a group of independent golf course raters has named Balsam Mountain's Arnold Palmer course the best new golf course in the state.
    Okay, it is true that the North Carolina Golf Panel, whose rankings appear in the April edition of Business North Carolina magazine, did not have many new courses to choose among, what with developers putting the brakes on new course construction.  However, Balsam's overall ranking of #24 on the list of 100 put it ahead of such notables as the Nicklaus Signature Cliffs at Walnut Cove, just behind #21 Bright's Creek (Fazio) and well ahead of Trillium Links, the unusual Morris Hatalsky design, which crept onto the list at #98.
    The NC Golf Panel's list is not available online yet, but for an article about the list, see Keith Jarrett's article at the Asheville Citizen-Times by clicking here.

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Arnold Palmer's design for Balsam Mountain Preserve is high on stunning views, as well as challenging golf.

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Employees dining in the company cafeteria at Gillette Ridge in Bloomfield, CT, have a nice view of the action on the Arnold Palmer golf course.


Hot properties, cold market:  Last week we reported that Balsam Mountain Preserve near Waynesville, NC, had racked up record first quarter sales results while other high-end golf communities nearby sold no more than one or two home sites (and others barely hung on for dear life).  Is Balsam an isolated case or can other communities boast similar results?

Going once, going twice...:  Some residents of high-end golf communities are forced to sell their lots or homes because of financial considerations or personal issues (divorce, relocation, homesickness).   Many are finding a real estate auction sale the last best resort to unload those properties.  But for buyers, are the potential bargains at an auction worth the risk?  Or are we doing a fool's bidding?

Golf with an edifice complex:  The site of Gillette Ridge Golf Club in Bloomfield, CT, is most unusual.  It weaves its way amid trees, some monolithic looking sculptures, gently rolling hills and corporate offices.  Where insurance execs are cutting costs, eager golfers are trying to cut strokes on the difficult Arnold Palmer track.  Also, a nice community of townhouses adjacent to the course means some folks can walk to work and to the first tee.

The editor's sight:  This week your editor has a thorough eye exam in preparation for cataract surgery next month.  It may be true that, in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king, but I don't feel much like a king on the golf course these days, what with 20/200 vision in my left eye (especially tough to line up putts).  My current eyesight is good for only one thing -- raising my handicap, leaving me in great position for tournaments later in the summer. (I hate the label "sandbagger," but what's a fella to do?)  If any of you have had cataract surgery, I'd love to hear what it did or didn't do for your golf game, and your reputation.

    As I write this, it is approaching 80 degrees in Connecticut, heading toward 90.  Finally, for golfers in the northern U.S., the long winter of our discontent may be over.