The Wall Street Journal 's Personal Journal section today includes two front-page articles that should be of interest to readers of this site.  One is about golf and one is about real estate.  (Note:  Full text of the articles is available only to subscribers).

     Tara Parker-Pope, the editor of the paper's Health Journal column, has some sobering news and advice for those of us who play the game.  Her contention is that our golf swings can tell us something about our overall health.  What, for example, does an inconsistent swing tell you about your health?  Parker-Pope's contention is that such a swing indicates we "lack strength in our 'core' muscles."  These are the deeper muscles in places fundamental to a smooth, repeatable swing, such as thighs, hips and buttocks.  What about accuracy issues?  The problem, the author contends, may be a sign of looming neck arthritis and shoulder problems.  I have both physical issues as well as the consequent misdirected hits.  Indeed, in my younger days, I either drew or, when I mishit, pulled the ball.  Now I spray right almost as often as I go left.

    The accompanying chart, attributed to a 2006 Golfer Health Study commissioned by Golf Digest, comes to some depressing conclusions.  Eight-percent of golfers suffer from pain, injury or illness; 27% have back pain; 66% are overweight; and 30% have played with a hangover.  We really have to love the game to put ourselves through all that (the drinking aside).

    The other Personal Journal article indicates that more and more young people -- those barely out of their 30s -- are purchasing second-homes in anticipation of using them as retirement homes later.  Most of the examples highlight properties on lakes, and most of those are within a few hours driving distance of the young couples' primary homes and workplaces.  In the more reasonably priced golfing communities we have visited in the southeast, we have noted that young couples -- some without children -- are buying their primary homes in golf course communities, and those who can afford it, are buying second homes a reasonable distance away, some with golf courses on site or nearby.  This developing phenomenon could continue to help prices stabilize in the south even as they wobble in the north.


    Every once in a while, I get the urge to imagine I am someone other than me.  The web site FindYourSpot.com is a good place to do it.  FindYourSpot is one of those sites that asks you a bunch of questions -- in this case, about what you want in a place to live -- and then provids a list of towns based on your responses.  When I first tried FindYourSpot a few years ago, it told me, quite emphatically, that my responses indicated I wanted to live in the Texas Hill Country.  That is one of the reasons I intend to visit the best golf course communities between Austin and San Antonio in the coming months.

    With a little free time today, I decided to "pose" at FindYourSpot as a serious golfer who is concerned about little other than identifying a place where I could play all the time.  I answered the climate questions in that regard, indicating that summers were meant to be long and hot, and when it asked if I needed to play golf often, I provided a "Strongly Agree."  Virtually everything else I marked as "Neutral," including the question about whether I like weather that is neither too hot or too cold; I went "Neutral" on that one on one taking, and then "Strongly Agree" on the next.

    The results were interesting, and dramatically different just by switching my responses on the not-too-hot, not-too-cold question.  When I empahsized long, hot summers, my top five selections came up, in order, Key West, Naples, Hilton Head Island, Opalousas, LA, and Covington, LA.  When I opted for the more moderate annual climate, FindYourSpot found me locations in Tennessee and Kentucky.

    The thing is, I have no interest in living in Kentucky, Tennessee, or the hottest places in Florida, although I am intrigued by the Texas Hill Country, as I mentioned above.  But maybe FindYourSpot knows something I don't know.  If I fall in love with the Texas hills, you will be the first to know.  In the meantime, FindYourSpot is a pleasant diversion, if not a deadly accurate one.