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The longest and perhaps toughest hole at Bear Lake Reserve is the 445 yard 1st.

 

Altitude adjustment:  Golfers, boaters and hikers live high life in western Carolina

    Most dedicated golfers recoil at the notion of membership at a nine-hole golf course, especially one that plays to a measly 1,900 yards and par 29.  For most of us, golf is a game divisible only by 18, and par for the course is somewhere between 35 and 36 per nine holes.  No fractional memberships for us.
    But you just might change your mind after a spin around the soon to open nine at The Summit Golf Club at Bear Lake Reserve, near Tuckasegee, NC.  At an altitude of 3,800 feet, the dramatic routing by Nicklaus Design group is both high and mighty.
    Bear Lake's developers say that golf is "just another amenity" at the four-year old community.  Perhaps, but a tour of the course with Director of Golf Bo Alexander is persuasive that Terramesa Group, which purchased thebearlake2fromtee.jpg property earlier this year from the original developers Centex Destination Properties, hopes to reel in golfers to the water-oriented property.  They have lavished a lot of attention and made a significant investment to produce some impressive eye candy golf that may just overcome the nine-hole stigma.
    The cost to build The Summit amounted to about $1 million per hole, or $9.5 million.  That compares favorably with one of the most celebrated regulation courses in the area, Mountain Top, where the Discovery Land Group spent $21 million for its 18 holes.  The Tom Fazio-designed Mountain Top, Alexander says, would be the likely choice of serious golfers from Bear Lake who feel the necessity to add membership in an 18-hole club.  
    Any of the nine holes I saw at Bear Lake could be the "signature" hole at most courses.  I didn't get to play the course, which opens July 1, but it was obvious that the average golfer with an accuracy problem might verybearlake3fromtee.jpg well go through 18 holes worth of golf balls in the span of 9.  From the tips, the longest hole, #1, plays 445 yards and the shortest a mere 91 yards. I hope the accompanying photos do justice to how much danger lurks on most shots at Bear Lake.        
    A pristine 500-acre lake is in the name and at the core of Bear Lake Reserve.  Canoes and kayaks dotted the lake during my visit, and I watched a father and two young children placidly fishing from their canoe.  For now, powered boats are permitted on the water but the guess locally is that the state will put restrictions on motor boats in the coming years, especially as more and more people move to Bear Lake Reserve and across the lake.  The lake, the result of damming the Tuckasegee River in the 1950s, is also accessible to the public.
    Bear Lake dominates the views from many of the 2,100-acre community's properties and from the rustic clubhouse - the Lake Club -- where couples and families alike gathered last Saturday. Inside, the Lake Club is large and warm, all hewn wood and stone and dramatic angles. Bear Lake does not attract much traffic in the winter, but food is served year-round by a young and enthusiastic wait staff.  The food I had at dinner and lunch was well prepared.
    Bear Lake's other amenities have a strongly outdoors orientation.  Fifteen miles of hiking trails thread theirbearlake5green.jpg way through the community.  Helpfully, Terramesa has published a "field guide" to the hiking trails, identifying their routing and degrees of difficulty ("easy," "moderate," and "strenuous").  A fishing village is also planned although it doesn't take a village today to pull brown trout and small mouth bass from the fertile fishing grounds on the lake.
    Bear Lake is somewhat remote, with no commercial airport nearby, but at about three hours from Atlanta and Charlotte, it certainly is close enough to make long weekend stays practical.  The community's entrance is at the end of a country lane three miles from State Road 107; the last quarter mile before Bear Lake's entrance is unpaved, a bit of a turnoff but, according to Sales Exec Jeremy Sessoms, the state plans to finally pave it in the coming months.  The community is best approached from the north; to get to Bear Lake from the south involves a trip along the winding and often crowded two-lane Highway 64.  I drove it during the day but would not look forward to it at night.
    Highway 107 continues north past Bear Lake to the little town of Tuckasegee and on to the more substantial Sylva.  Sylva is home to Western Carolina University, and consequently the area doesn't want for a little culturebearlake7frombehindgreen.jpg and entertainment.  Western Carolina, nestled into the local mountains, is home to 9,000 students and some pretty good sports teams. (Bit of trivia:  In 1980, Western Carolina hoopster Ronnie Carr became the first college player to make a shot from outside the three-point line.)  Director of Golf Alexander has invited Western Carolina's golf team to use the Bear Lake practice facilities.  They will be pleased indeed.
     Land prices at Bear Lake, while not inexpensive, are certainly in line with other communities that feature impressive mountain and lake views.  But the most significant expenses are in clearing land, blasting rock and laying foundations against the hillsides where, of course, many of the best views are found.  The developers have wisely factored in the costs to build and priced the home sites comparatively.  It isn't unusual, for example, for a flat piece of land with mountain views to be priced a couple of hundred thousand dollars more than a lot with a sidehill lie but a similar view.  In the end, the total costs work out to be about the same.
    Home sites at two acres and more begin around $250,000 for a modest mountain-view lot and move up to around $600,000 for the best vistas.  Lake view property is slightly higher and one-acre lakefront sites, withbearlake8fromtee.jpg dock, can exceed $1 million for the choicest positions.  For those who do not want to make a full commitment, the many cottage communities that dot the hillside might fill the bill.  I stayed in Cottage 77 in the Whispering Falls neighborhood, a cluster of comfortable, Craftsman-style cottages.  My cottage, owned by the Edwards family of Tulsa, OK, and rented out by Bear Lake in their behalf, featured three bedrooms and as many bathrooms. (Note:  As is my custom, I paid for my accommodations.)  Cottages begin at $500,000 for a two-bedroom unit and reach $750,000 for the four-bedroom versions.  Some are available furnished.  As you contemplate a future purchase, you could stay in one of the cottages or handful of condos that look down on the lake.  The tariff is $360 per night in summer and includes access to all amenities, including the golf course.
    Bear Lake Reserve, Tuckasegee, NC.  828.293.3455.  Course designer:  Nicklaus Design.  Course yardage:  1,900 yards, par 29.  Ratings and slopes to be determined.  If you are interested in property at Bear Lake Reserve or additional information, contact me and I will be happy to put you in touch with someone who can help.

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From Bear Lake Reserve's Lake Club, parents can sip a drink and keep a watchful eye on their water-loving children below.

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The Lake Club is the social center of Bear Lake Reserve. Behind and above the club, condominium units are available for purchase or rental.

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The 11th hole at Connestee Falls is a deceptive little par 5.   Hit no more than a 3 wood off the tee to remain on the upper fairway.  Then a medium iron second shot sets up a wedge to the elevated green.  It is the most visually attractive hole on a course that has a number of them.


Escape valve:  Florida "halfbacks" let off steam in Carolina mountains


    As I wended my way along curved mountain roads from upstate South Carolina to Brevard, NC, I might have been in Florida, for all the Sunshine State license plates I saw on the road and in the gas stations and luncheonettes along the way.  When I met with Carol Clay, a local Brevard real estate agent, she explained it.
    "They leave Florida because of the Hs [aitches], the same reasons my husband and I did three years ago," said Clay, who lived in Florida for 30 years.  "It's the heat, humidity, hurricanes and hectic way of life.
    "To be honest, after three years in the mountains, I need to be dragged back to Florida for a visit."
    Most people from Florida who live in and around the charming, artsy town of Brevard, which hosts a famousconnesteedavidkelleypoints.jpg annual summer music festival, haven't left the warm climes of the Sunshine State forever, choosing to maintain second homes in the Carolina mountains.  Prices are still reasonable enough to have it both ways -- the warm winters in Florida and Georgia, and the beat-the-heat and laid-back nature of the Blue Ridge Mountains.  Plenty of folks from Atlanta are also attracted by the Brevard area climate and the mere three-hour ride up the interstates.
    As if to prove Carol's point, I was matched up for my round at Connestee Falls, just south of Brevard, with David Kelley, a hale fellow well met from West Palm Beach, FL.  David, a litigation attorney, maintains a second home just a couple of miles from the community's front gate but he enjoys playing the reasonably priced (greens fees just $60) George Cobb designed course at Connestee Falls.  He confirmed Carol's opinion that the North Carolina mountains provide stress release for those forced to buck traffic and dodge the occasional hurricane in Florida.
    David and I played a course that is vintage Cobb, which is to say it is neither boring nor dramatic. I am more

If the greens had been cut, Connestee might have played three or four strokes tougher.

familiar with the venerable designer's coastal courses, but at Connestee Falls, he followed his customary style with a routing that won't overtax the 20 handicap - which David was - but will still appeal to the 11 handicap, which I purport to be.  In fact, if anything, Connestee is too fair to the better player, with a rating of just 70.8 from the back tees at 6,485 and 69.3 from the regular tees at 6,062 and 69.3, which David and I played.  
    The first hole, a wide-open par 4, sets the tone.  Even a modest drive will leave a routine approach to a large, albeit sloping green.  The challenges at Connestee are all in the sloping, both in some of the fairways and in most of the amply sized greens.  As at Cherokee Valley, which I reviewed yesterday, only one of the par 5s plays to over 500 yards.  Also, as at Cherokee, the mountain vistas are curiously out of sight from most of the course, the best view reserved for Connestee's practice range, a hint that the developers at Connestee, which emerged in the 1970s, gave the prime land to the home sites.  
    Cobb does use elevation changes well, throwing a few blind tee shots and approaches to elevated greensconnesteeviewfromdeck.jpg into the mix.  The par 4s are the strongest holes at Connestee.  The 4th is the #1 handicap hole on the course, a medium length (398 yards) par 4 with a lake in the middle of the fairway but unreachable with driver for all but the most accomplished (and strongest) player.  The approach after a decent drive will need to carry about 130 yards to a steeply elevated green that slopes back to front.  It is worthy of its designation of toughest on the course.
    I noted very few fairway bunkers to worry about off the tee, and those at greenside did not seem to pose any significant threats.  The course is beautifully conditioned, although I would like to play it when the greens are cut.  They were quite slow; at the end of May, there really is no excuse on a Friday for them not to be cut.  We saw plenty of men on lawn mowers during our round, so it was not a case of a day off for the workers. With a few tougher pin positions and faster greens, I estimate that Connestee Falls would play three to four strokes more difficult.  Slow as the greens were, I had some straight downhill four footers on the big, sloping greens that gave me pause. I was struck by how hard it was to read breaks on most putts; mountain courses typically give you a clue of which way putts break (either toward or away from the mountains), but I found no such clues at Connestee.
    Connestee Falls has some odd touches.  It is the only place I have been where you pick up and return your carts to the deck outside the pro shop, overlooking the practice green below and the mountains in the distance. connestee12thfromtee.jpgGiven the 30+ year old vintage of the club, the clubhouse, locker rooms and pro shop seem a little long in the tooth but are well maintained.  There is nothing odd about the golf membership fees, however, which are assessed on an annual basis.  A property owning couple pays just $2,750 for unlimited golf, range balls, locker and club storage.  Although the community is in the mountains, the golf course is open year round.  Snowfall is minimal and rarely stays on the ground for more than a day or two.
    Because of the 1,600-acre community's age, and the availability of home sites after more than 30 years, house sizes and styles are all over the place (literally and figuratively).
    "Connestee Falls is still an evolving community," says Carol Clay.  "The new homes are considerably bigger than the older ones."  A selection of condominiums appeal especially to the 60% of Connestee's residents who stay on property seasonally and don't see the point in making any sizeable investment for a short-term stay.
    Prices range from $150,000 to the millions, but the median spot seems to be in the $400s.  A two-bedroom, two-bath condo, for example, built in 1978 and sporting 1,250 square feet, is on the market currently for $179,000. A three-bedroom, three-bath home with lake and mountain views and 2,500 square feet is available at $650,000.     

    These prices seem especially reasonable given Connestee Falls' proximity to the charming Brevard, and except for the current blip in the market in Florida, in-flows from the south have been brisk in recent years.  Consequently, the Connestee community is undergoing something of a modest transformation.  In its earliest days in the '70s, naturally the lots with the best views sold first.  Although homes on those properties likely have not yet reached the end of their natural lives, some have been bought and torn down to make way for new homes that take fullest advantage of the great views.  Other older homes have simply been refurbished.  All homes are set well back from and above the golf course, and hidden in the woods.  I didn't have a clear view of any home until late during the first nine, although I knew they were there.  Out of bounds stakes were at a minimum, just the way we like them, and in the few cases that a backyard was anywhere near the fairway, red hazard stakes made it possible to strike your ball without penalty (just don't ground that club).  The lack of OB stakes is a refreshing touch and a big plus for the golf experience at Connestee Falls.
    I don't often write about property taxes -- compared to what all of us are used to in our primary homes, they tend not to be outlandish in most communities I survey -- but the taxes in Connestee Falls and the surrounding county are worth mentioning, just 54 cents per $100 of assessed value.  A $500,000 home in Connestee Falls, therefore, will throw off property taxes of just $2,700.  If you were to live inside the city limits of the attractive Brevard, count on close to double that rate, still a pleasant surprise to those of us used to metro area taxes up north.
    That isn't the only cost of living advantage to life in the mountains.
    "We cut our car insurance in half when we moved up here," says Carol Clay. Take that, Florida.

    Connestee Falls, Brevard, NC  828.885.2005.  Designed by George Cobb.  Yardage/rating/slope:  Black tees 6,485/70.8/125; Blue tees 6,062/69.3/117; Ladies tees 5,056/64.4/104. Green fees $60 May to Oct (cart included).  Membership fees (full family): $2,750 annually (includes practice range, locker, club storage).  If you are interested in more information or in a visit to Connestee Falls, please contact us.

 

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Homes around the Connestee Falls golf course sit back and above the course, when they aren't totallly hidden by trees.