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The marsh on Low Country golf courses looks peaceful enough, but danger lurks. 

 

    The Charleston National golf course, just east of its namesake city in South Carolina, is a solid Rees Jones layout whose hazards are mostly visible from tee to green.  They include a large number of fairway and greenside traps, some of them positioned to snare your wayward shot and make you pay, but others almost a saving grace.  That is because they often separate your errant ball from the worse fate of the adjacent marshland.  Charleston National has plenty of marshland, and once your ball enters the muck and mire of that terrain, it is lost forever.100_4865gatorxingat_cnatl.jpg

    Should you enter the muck and mire yourself, you might be lost forever as well.  Although the Low Country marsh is home to many docile and exotic birds, such as the majestic Great Blue Heron and elegant snowy egret, it also hosts more territorial animals who don't appreciate home invasions, alligators and poisonous snakes chief among them.  When playing golf in the Low Country, it is wise to heed all warning signs.  Gators especially do not usually venture near fairways and greens,  but snakes can be slightly more adventurous.  Playing golf at a place like Charleston National gives added meaning to the term "keep your head down."

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    Money magazine's latest issue (and web site) includes its list of the best places to live in the U.S.  Only two southeastern towns - Lake Mary, FL (#4) and Suwanee, GA (#10) - make the top 10, but both offer outstanding golfing options.
    Lake Mary's position just 30 minutes from Orlando and 45 from Daytona Beach puts it close enough to the hustle, bustle and advantages of big city conveniences and the beach, but far enough away so as not to suffer many of the consequences (traffic, pollution, crime).  The area is chock a block with golf courses, and the article in Money is embellished by a photo of a hole at Timacuan Golf Club, which was built in the center of the town.  The green in the photo is surrounded by sand.  Membership in the semi-private club seems reasonable at $5,500 for full family golf, and $275 a month for dues.  Timacuan was designed by Ron Garl and Bobby Weed, two respected, if not first-rank, architects.  Money writes that the best things about Lake Mary are its small town nature, a robust economy and zero state income tax.  The worst, as you might guess, are the hot summers and threats of hurricanes coming across the Gulf of Mexico.
    Suwanee, which is located along the Chattahoochee River about 40 minutes northeast of Atlanta, also boasts a range of fine private and public golf courses, including some inside the gates of communities.  Home prices in River Club, for example, with its private Greg Norman course, begin above $1 million.  The Arthur Hills' Olde Atlanta Club is also located in Suwanee and is one of 18 clubs in the greater Atlanta area managed by the Canongate organization.  Membership in one club makes the 17 others accessible for a modest payment of greens fees (although as a full golf member, you will not pay fees at your "home" club). Bear's Best, a compilation of 18 of Jack Nicklaus' holes from other courses he has designed, is also inside Suwanee's city limits.  We are not sure about the flow of a course that borrows the individual holes from elsewhere, but Nicklaus himself designed Bear's Best, and he is fussy about the quality of his work.  The course is open to the public.
    Only two other towns in the southeast made Money's top 25 best places to live:  Apex, NC, and Holly Springs, NC.  Both are just at the fringe of the popular city of Raleigh.  Best of all for the golf obsessed, the two towns are a straight 45 minute shot down U.S. Highway 1 to some of the best golf in America, at Pinehurst.
    Money's web site has data on all its top 100 places.