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If there is anything wrong with the links-style layout at North Hampton Golf Club, it is that homes are often in view just off the fairways, although rarely near the field of play. 


    These are perilous times for big national developers whipsawed by the housing crisis, and they are pulling out all the stops to reduce their inflated inventories.  Virtually all of the name developers, as well as smaller ones, are pricing their homes aggressively and offering other attractive incentives.  But given the beating that real estate investors have taken, no one is going to buy a home without visiting their future property at least once.  So developers are not only sharpening their price reduction pencils but they are also concentrating on more creative ways to attract potential buyers to make that visit.  
    One of the most prominent developers in the southeast, LandMar, is making a special appeal to golfers in that regard, offering a Member for a Day plan for those looking for a vacation or permanent golf home in the southeastern U.S.  The Member for a Day (or Stay and Play package at some of their developments) offers all the privileges of club membership to the non-member who is willing to be shown around a LandMar golf community for a few hours.
    Florida-based LandMar's roster of developments is impressive, spanning Florida and Georgia and including communities with highly regarded golf courses like North Hampton in Fernandina Beach, FL, and Osprey Cove

Sales tours of communities do not take more than a couple of hours and the sales people are generally open and honest with answers to your questions.

in St. Marys, GA.  The Arnold Palmer-designed North Hampton recently showed up as the 45th best course in the nation, private or public, on a list at GolfLink.com (see the article immediately below).  More significantly, LandMar has a "strategic alliance" with Crescent Communities and Hampton Golf which gives residents of a LandMar community reciprocal golf privileges at eight other LandMar courses, many within driving distance, as well as the more far flung Crescent courses, which include the well-regarded Rim Golf Club in Payson, AZ (Weiskopf/Morrish design), and Sugarloaf in Duluth, GA (Coore/Crenshaw design).
    The LandMar Member for a Day package includes a round of golf per person, the required community tour with a member of the sales staff, and access to all the facilities.  In truth, though, North Hampton is available to the public for play, so if you wanted to avoid the community tour, you could pay a little more and test the golf course before you take the tour (green fees are incredibly reasonable for this quality of golf, around $60 on a weekday, cart included).  My experience with these tours is that they are not hard sell, they do not take more than a couple of hours, and the sales people are generally open and honest with answers to your questions.  
    North Hampton still has a few home sites available at prices beginning in the low $100s and some built homes starting in the $400s.  Amelia Island and its beaches (and resort golf courses) are just a few minutes away, and the increasingly popular city of Jacksonville about 20 minutes away.  If you are considering a slightly more rural golf community, LandMar's Osprey Cove, about 40 minutes north of North Hampton and near the charming St. Marys, GA, offers not only Member for a Day but also a stay and play package for just $99 per night that includes golf on its private Mark McCumber course.  I've visited Osprey Cove and liked it, although rain prevented me from playing the golf course.  Home site and house prices are lower than at North Hampton but the low country environs, for me, are even better. 

    I have contacts at both Osprey Cove and North Hampton, as well as other golf communities in the Jacksonville area, so if you are interested, contact me and I will get you more information and put you in touch with the person best able to help you with golf arrangements or a stay and play package.

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North Hampton Golf Club in Fernandina Beach, FL, ranked #45 on GolfLink's list of best courses in the U.S., ahead of the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island and Torrey Pines.  Golf homes adjacent to the Arnold Palmer course are reasonably priced beginning around $350,000.  Above is the par 3 14th hole.

 

    The popular web site GolfLink.com published its take on the top 100 courses in the U.S. recently.  According to the web site, the list reflects the opinions of its millions of readers rather than experts ("editors of golf magazines").  It shows.  As in major league baseball, whose all-star teams are largely decided by fan votes, the results can defy logic.
    The top 10 is all over the place.  I won't bellyache about #1 on the list, Bethpage Black on Long Island, NY, a

When you turn the choice of "best" over to fans, results can look bizarre.

U.S. Open site (and a public course), although this may be the first time it has ever been named top golf course in the U.S.  Bethpage Black is widely hailed as one of the toughest courses in the nation, although not one the average golfer would want to play regularly (unless the average golfer were a masochist).  The second and third place courses also won't generate too much controversy; Augusta National and Pine Valley are on most lists of best courses in the nation, and although I preferred Pine Valley by a wide margin, I have to acknowledge my judgment could be affected by having played the Master's venue on two dreary days in February.  No azaleas, no lightning fast greens but, still, atmosphere to beat the band.
    I don't know Kearney Hill Links in Lexington, KY, a 20-year old Pete Dye layout that ranks fourth on GolfLink's list.  The courses rated #5 thru #7 all have solid reputations, respectively Riviera Country Club in California, World Woods (Barrens Course) in Florida and Koolau in Hawaii.  The problem with the list really begins at #8 where GolfLink's readers place the wonderfully wacky, but not-to-everyone's-taste Tobacco Road in North Carolina.  I suppose there is a list somewhere on which Tobacco Road should rank in the top 10 -- perhaps the list of most acres of un-raked sand -- but a best-courses list is not it.  Tobacco Road's eighth place rating puts it ahead of Pebble Beach, Spyglass, Shinnecock, Merion, Oakmont and dozens of others it should trail.  
    As you move down the list, the choices become more and more illogical.  Baywood Greens in Delaware is a
Is it time for a Ryder Cup at North Hampton Golf Club?

beautifully manicured public facility I played a few years ago.  It features beautiful landscaping and a profusion of flora that would impress the greenskeeper at Augusta.  But 10th best in the nation?  I've played it, enjoyed it, and would rank it below the 25th best course on the list of those I have played (mindful that I haven't played 200 courses that are probably better).  I've also played True Blue Golf Club in Pawleys Island, SC, many times, and although I find it interesting and fair, despite its too-large greens and unevenly tended waste areas where carts are permitted, its position at 38th on a list of best golf courses is just silly.  
    I also scratch my head over the 45th choice, North Hampton Golf Club in Fernandina Beach, FL, the best Arnold Palmer designed course I have played.  It is a fine links style course a few miles from the beach, and its attractions include tall grasses that appear native, well placed bunkers (and not as huge as the typical Palmer traps) and shore breezes that can play with shot selection and your head.  But if North Hampton is better than the Ocean Course at Kiawah and Oak Hill, as the GolfLink list suggests, someone had better let the organizers of the Ryder Cup know.

    There are plenty of reasonably priced golf homes and properties near many of these courses.  If you would like more information about golf communities in these areas or about other golf real estate, let me know by clicking the Contact Us button at the top of the page.

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Caledonia Golf & Fish Club in Pawleys Island, SC, is rated 15th on the GolfLink list of best U.S. courses (approach to the par 4 13th hole is shown).  Caledonia's sister course, True Blue, came in at 38th, ahead of courses that have hosted U.S. Open and Ryder Cup competitions.  A number of condos priced in the low six figures are adjacent to a few of the fairways at True Blue.