Planning the Ultimate Myrtle Beach Golf Vacation
As to be expected, the justifiably lauded Caledonia Golf and Fish Club in Pawleys Island, SC, makes the Myrtle Beach Golf Vacation guide list of recommended places to play.


    Chances are good that at some point in your golfing life, Myrtle Beach, SC, has been on your itinerary.  The combination of reasonably priced accommodations and dozens of fine golf courses packed into about a 100-mile stretch attracts hundreds of thousands of golfers every year.
    But for those who have never been to the Grand Strand, or have but let someone else make the arrangements, traps await (in more ways than one).  Of the 100+ golf courses 50 miles on either side of

It is hard to put a price on a memorable golf vacation, but how does $19.97 sound?

Myrtle Beach, a few are clunkers, and one or two of those in your rotation could cast a pall over an otherwise enjoyable week.  Accommodations can run the gamut from comfortable to tawdry, despite the fancy brochures and on-line come-ons.  And although I would never define any of the area's restaurants as gourmet, a few are excellent, but many others are overpriced and overrated.  Figuring out which are which is not a job for a neophyte golf vacation planner.
     It is hard to put a price on a memorable golf vacation, but I will -- $19.97 -- the price of a comprehensive guide, Planning the Ultimate Myrtle Beach Golf Vacation by David Baum and the editors of the only unbiased golf travel newsletter on the market, Golf Odyssey.

Nice work, taken seriously
    The newly published guide breaks down the Grand Strand into north, central and south sections.  Each section includes reviews of the best golf courses, lodging accomodations and restaurants in the eyes of the editors.  They have played all the courses they recommend, eaten in all the restaurants and visited all the lodging options.  It is nice work if you can get it, but they take their work very seriously, and each of their recommendations is well argued.
    I consider myself well acquainted with Myrtle Beach, having made dozens of trips there since my first visit in 1968, when a room at the oceanfront Sea Mist Travelodge, 36 holes of daily golf (with cart), breakfast and a late afternoon oyster roast set me back a total $99.  I own a home at the south end of the Grand Strand, at Pawleys Plantation, and I agree with the editors' assessment of the golf course there (although in the time since their visit a year ago, conditions have improved).  The editors highlight most of the courses I would put on my own "best of" list, and they do a convincing job of explaining their choices.  More importantly, they provide tips about how to access a few courses, like the famed Dunes Club, that make non-member tee times difficult to attain.  And if you have ever been victimized by -- surprise -- aerated greens, the Myrtle Beach Golf Vacation guide provides a handy list of dates each course plans to punch holes in their sod.  That alone is worth the modest cover price of $19.97, but the guide provides many more money-saving and, potentially, vacation-saving tips.

Too good to be true?  Not   

    A few slight missteps take nothing away from the value of the guide.  For example, in a review of the outstanding Resort Course at Grande Dunes, the editors ignore the signature 14th hole, a long and beautiful par 3 that plays alongside the Intra-coastal Waterway and over water to a large sloping green protected by a yawning bunker.  They tout two other nice one shotters in lieu of the 14th.  Okay, that's a subjective call, but not so their description of the daunting 16th at Pawleys Plantation, a long par 4.  I've played it dozens of times, and I can testify it moves hard left, not a "dogleg right" as the editors indicate.  And although some of their golf reviews carry a "born-on date," I wish they all did.  Conditions on Myrtle Beach's courses are a function of season (winter and summer tend to be the iffiest), and it would be especially helpful in planning a trip to know the months the insiders played each course.
    Those few niggles aside, at $19.97 the Myrtle Beach Golf Vacation guide is that rare animal that seems too good to be true but isn't.  It will pay for itself the first time you use it.
    To order your downloaded digital copy of the Myrtle Beach Golf Vacation guide, go to www.golfodyssey.com/myrtle_beach.
grandedunesmemberclubforecaddie.jpg

The Myrtle Beach Golf Vacation guide explains how you can play the private Nick Price designed Members Club at Grande Dunes, where a caddie or forecaddie is mandatory.

    I wrote here last Saturday about properties at Tennessee National, the Greg Norman golf community near Knoxville and about what seemed like a reasonably priced Discovery Package.  Emails to two of the marketing and

A slow market and local mushroom farm are stinking things up for Tennessee National.

sales associates at Tennessee National have gone unanswered; I wanted to know simply if the $149 two-day/one-night Discovery Package included a round of golf on the excellent Norman course.  I figured the lack of a response might signal that sales traffic was brisk and the sales associates were just too busy to respond within a week.
    Not so, according to one of our readers, after she read my article, and to a group of folks who live in the Knoxville area.
    "They have stopped all plans for amenities until the market has improved," wrote our reader, who was happy to be able to sell a piece of investment property at Tennessee National a few months ago.  "They are located near a mushroom farm which exudes a bad odor now and...Greg Norman [may have] ditched this project."
    I trust the opinion of our readers but I wanted to do a little further independent digging.  I posted a query at the Knoxville forum of City-Data.com, a web site that can be helpful in terms of local knowledge around the nation if you take what is said with a grain of salt.  Some people have axes to grind with a particular community, but I found these responses to my question quite balanced.
    "Promises were made to build a marina, golf pro shop, and club," wrote someone with the screen name OldManBob, who indicated he is not a resident of Tennessee National, "[but] nothing yet, and many lots are not selling."
    "Too large, too extravagant, overshot their budget on infrastructure
Builders were obligated to buy multiple lots and build spec homes, which now are sitting unsold.

up-front costs, now they don't have money to build their 'promised' amenities," wrote another local, "because the lots aren't moving and they don't have capital."  However, the same writer added, "It can be a gorgeous development" and they have started to "cut the road down to the boat dock and marina."  However, the writer adds, no construction equipment is present at the marina site.
    "One problem Tennessee National has," according to another City-Data contributor, "is that builders were obligated to buy multiple lots and build spec houses.  Neither the houses or (sic) lots have sold and since most are small builders, they are facing a real cash crunch.  I look for there to be some who just walk away, and there will be a bunch of lots (and spec houses as well) going into forclosure (sic)."
    A resident of the nearby sprawling (5,000 acre) community known as Tellico Village (with three 18-hole golf courses), named for the huge lake that was created by the Tennessee Valley Authority controlled flooding 40 years ago, echoed a cautionary note about amenities that you will find me harping about often in this space.
    "...we are pretty much sold on Tellico Village, if you want a golf/lake community," he wrote. "We know that these sort of things [unfilled promises] happen with planned developments when the economy changes.  At TV [Tellico Village], all the amenities are in place and the development and its association are mature and operating in the black for years.
    "They continue to upgrade and expand facilities," he added, "as the community grows, so it doesn't look old or raggedy.  And I think you get more for your money when you buy a resale home."
    "You don't get to custom design it, but I can live with that."
    Wisdom from the front lines of home ownership.

 

If you would like to read the full discussion at City-Data, click here.