Golfweek magazine has just published its list of the best new golf courses in America for 2009/10, and only four courses in the Southeast region made the top 25.  Ballyhack, the tough and visually arresting Lester

Golf may be in better shape than we are led to believe if Ballyhack is only the 15th best new course.

George layout just outside Roanoke, VA, landed the #15 spot.  Lodestone, a Hale Irwin design in McHenry, MD, was cited at #20 on the list, with Tim Cate’s Cape Fear National just outside Wilmington, NC, at #22 and the Waldorf Astoria Golf Club (Rees Jones) in Orlando at #23.  The West and Pacific Northwest areas far outstripped any other region in new course construction, but the Midwest contributed a half dozen of the top 25 courses.  As for the Northeast, just two courses made the top 40 and none in the top 25.  Tom Doak's Old Macdonald layout in Bandon, OR, blew away the competition for the number one overall spot.

        The work is being spread around the golf architecture industry, if the top 15 new courses are any indication.  Each was designed by a different architect or pair of architects, including Tom Fazio, Robert Trent Jones Jr., Coore & Crenshaw, Faldo, Nicklaus, Rees Jones, Pete Dye, Arthur Hills and Greg Norman. 

        If there are 21 new courses better than Cape Fear National and 14 better than Ballyhack, the fortunes of designer

Would we guzzle 28-year old Scotch?  Then why force a round under four hours on a great golf course?

golf may not be as dire as reports indicate.  I played Cape Fear National (not to be confused with the nearby Cape Fear Country Club) this year and drove around every one of Ballyhack’s holes just before it opened last year, and both are impressive, although quite different.  The relatively flat Cape Fear is a Low Country golf course, featuring sandy soils, native grasses, sprawling bunkers and reedy pine trees that form the borders for many holes.  Ballyhack’s bunkers are gouged into the sides of hills, intimidating in their shapes and depths, and in play on virtually every shot of over 100 yards.  It is a tough and pleasantly exhausting challenge.  Neither of these courses panders to some imagined new crop of golfers whose lives are so complicated that they need to play a round in well under four hours, as some industry pundits would have us believe of most golfers.

        Who among us would guzzle a snifter of 28-year old Scotch?  Cape Fear, Ballyhack and all courses of such character are best appreciated, and best played, slowly and deliberately.

        Note:  Cape Fear National is open to the public.  Although Ballyhack is private, the club offers lodging, two days of unlimited golf (for up to 4 people in a group) and dinner for $399 per person.  It’s worth it.

Ballyhackpar4fromtee

CapeFearNatl10th

Although vastly different high-quality golfing experiences, Ballyhack (top) and Cape Fear National both deservedly are among the best 25 new courses of the last two years, according to Golfweek.

     The old line that things that don’t kill you make you stronger applies to golf communities, as well as to individuals.  Case in point:  The golf community of Glenmore, just outside Charlottesville, VA, which not only contended with a housing recession, but also with a major embezzlement by the president of its club.  After a revisit to the 10-year old community a few weeks ago, it appears to me that Glenmore has come through the controversy with flags flying.

        I had the opportunity to renew my acquaintance with Glenmore Country Club courtesy of Tom Pace,

Some homes at Glenmore include exterior maintenance, a plus for those allergic to the smell of cut grass (except, of course, on a golf course).

a real estate broker on-site at the Keswick, VA, golf community.  Glenmore’s club members, a mix of retirees, working couples and young families, are strongly invested in the life of the club and community, according to Pace, himself a resident of the community and member of the club.  After the nearly three quarters of a million dollar embezzlement by a member of Glenmore’s founding family (he married into the family), it did not take long for a resident of Glenmore and his wife to step in and purchase the club, with the rousing support of its members.  You can read our original coverage of the story by clicking here ("Pall in the Family").

        Little seems to have changed since my first visit four years ago, except the superfluous hulking green scoreboard behind the 18th green has been taken down (thankfully, in my opinion, as it blocked part of the view of the majestic brick clubhouse).  The unfussy, rolling John LaFoy designed golf course, whose few blind shots and undulating greens demand a slight bit of local knowledge, was in fine shape, most of the well landscaped homes set a fair distance from the fairways and greens.  Out of bounds stakes are there to keep only the most wayward shots from being played from backyards.  The practice facility at Glenmore is one of the most expansive in the area, with a dedicated area for the club’s junior golf program.  I’ve included a few photos below to give you a taste of Glenmore’s charms.

GlenmoreClubhousefrom18thfairway

Addition by subtraction:  Gone is the hulking green scoreboard that once got in the way of views of the clubhouse beyond Glenmore's 18th green.

 

        Glenmore is well situated to the east of Charlottesville, home to the University of Virginia, and an hour from the airport in Richmond.  On the Saturday morning we played the golf course, my son and I and Tom Pace and his daughter, who plays for her local high school golf team, had the course to ourselves, which seemed strange until Tom explained that most members had begun their tailgating ritual at the university before that day’s home football game.  A number of UVA faculty members live inside the boundaries of the gated Glenmore.

        Glenmore offers an interesting blend of single-family houses, with prices that begin in the mid $400s and extend to $1.3 million.  One section of cottage-style homes includes exterior maintenance for those who, like me, are allergic to cut grass (except, of course, on golf courses).  A three-bedroom, three-bath cottage home is currently listed for $465,000.  Home sites run from the low $200s to $599,000 for a one-acre elevated lot with a combo view of the golf course, lake and the Blue Ridge Mountains a few miles beyond.

        The Glenmore golf course is open year round.  If you would like to arrange a visit, or simply request more information, contact me and I will be happy to put you in touch with Tom Pace.

Glenmorebehindabovegreen

Glenmoreapproachspectaclebunkers

Glenmorepar3towardclubhouse

Glenmore Country Club's golf course features large, undulating greens, lots of ups and downs, and homes set well beyond and above the layout's generous fairways.