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Private club membership provides extra services, personal relationships and well-tended clubhouses, like this one at The Reserve, which you cannot find at most daily-fee clubs.      

 

    My friend Bob and I played Wintonbury Hills in Bloomfield, CT, last week, and I am happy to report that the municipal course, which Pete Dye designed for a $1 fee, is still a challenge, still in fine shape and still a great way to spend four hours.  You can read my review of a year ago by clicking here.

    There are many fine municipal and daily fee courses across the country

There is something to be said for belonging to a club where everybody knows your name.

that are great alternatives for dedicated golfers who either can't afford private club fees and dues or don't play quite often enough to justify the outlays.  As I have written before at this site, many couples choose to purchase a home that is not inside the gates of a planned community, and they wind up having more golf courses at their disposal than if they belonged to a private club.  And the savings can be quite impressive.
    Let us say, for example, that you are looking for a home in the Myrtle Beach, SC, area.  Of the approximately 120 golf courses within an hour of town, fewer than a dozen are truly private.  One, The Reserve in Litchfield Beach, SC, is a beautifully appointed club with a grand clubhouse and sleek, pleasurable layout by Greg Norman.  DeBordieu Colony, another private club, is just 15 minutes down Highway 17 from The Reserve; membership fees at DeBordieu top $50,000. The initiation fee for Reserve club membership is $32,000 (non-equity membership), with monthly dues per golfing couple of about $400.  Assuming 10 years worth of play with a straight-line amortization of the $30,000 membership fee at $3,000 per year, as well as the $4,800 per year in dues, the annual outlay at The Reserve (cart fees excluded) would by about $8,000.  Home prices inside the gated Reserve, by the way, start in the $600s and run into the millions.
    Dozens of excellent daily fee courses within a few miles of The Reserve command average green fees of between $60 and $150, the higher ones for such well-regarded tracks as Caledonia Golf and Fish Club and The Founders Club, both just five minutes from The Reserve.  A Myrtle Beach Passport card costs just $39 and provides discounts up to 40% off green fees at virtually all the area courses; any local resident is eligible to purchase and use the annual card.  (Note:  Many golf-rich areas provide such arrangements.)
    Assuming the couple in our example at The Reserve lives there year round and plays golf on average three times per week (six rounds between them), or 312 times annually, their cost per round is just $25, comparatively a good deal.  If they live at The Reserve half the year, then the benefit begins to narrow, as it does if only one spouse plays golf or if their combined rounds are less than the six per week.  At one round per week, for example, or 50 per year, the per round cost at The Reserve would be $160, and the financial aspects of private club membership become a little more complicated.  Keep in mind also that most higher end daily-fee courses include use of a golf cart in the fee.

    Private club membership offers many intangible benefits, such as the ability to make strong personal associations with fellow members, planned social events that are typical of such a club, personal services and the ability to play without having to make advance tee times.  As at the Cheers bar, it is also nice to go where everybody knows your name.  But for those whose fixed incomes may not support an upward movement in dues and assessments that are always possible at a private club, daily fee golf at high-quality courses provides a viable alternative.caledonia_hole.jpg

Caledonia Golf & Fish Club is one of the highest rated daily fee courses in America (according to the Zagat guide).

    Please forgive me the departure.  This isn't about golf today, but it is about lifestyle and what it means to live well.  
    Paul Newman had it all.  His talent, displayed across the entire range of roles from dramatic to comedic, earned him the love of moviegoers and the respect of his colleagues, but fewer Oscars than he deserved (only one, for The Color of Money, out of 10 nominations).  He took the rejections with grit and grace.  
    He showed true grit and a zest for life in his parallel career as a racecar driver.  His looks and penetrating blue eyes made men jealous and women swoon, and yet he remained untainted by scandal and married to the same woman for more than 50 years.  As Time magazine wrote today in its obituary: "He deprived the tabloids of the scandal headlines they love: no rap sheet, no rehab stints, no notorious affairs..."
    Newman was above all a charitable man.  The kids who benefited from his Hole in the Wall Gang camps knew him not as a big Hollywood star but as a father and grandfather figure.  As an entrepreneur, his line of food products raised tens of millions of dollars for charities.  Not a comedian by any means, he showed an occasional sense of humor that was never better displayed than when he ate some of his company's dog food on late night TV to show how good it was.
    Paul Newman left nothing on the table.