OBJECTIVE, UNBIASED AND ALTOGETHER HELPFUL
I was sitting at my laptop earlier today, drinking a cup of tea and trying to decide what I might write about today. Because of a crowded desk, I put the cup down on a window ledge -- on top of a large, leather bound portfolio that was sent to me a few years ago by a central Florida community, Bella Collina. This was real leather, by the way, not faux, and about the size of a calf's back.
I recall wondering what kind of corporate ego would send something like that to potential customers without qualification. Bella Collina certainly didn't
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The hits just keep on coming against the Ginn Development Company, often referred to as Ginn Resorts. The developer and operator of such lush communities as Tesoro, Hammock Beach and Reunion in Florida, as well as Charlestowne, Laurelmor and Cobblestone Park in the Carolinas, is being sued by the Professional Golfer's Association for abruptly dropping its sponsorship of a Champions Tour event that is just a few months away.
According to the lawsuit, "The [Champions] Tour will incur monetary damages, including but not limited to Ginn's agreed-upon contribution to the tournament purses and other expenses of each tournament, as well as lost television fees and other revenues from the tournaments."
The tour had to know what the rest of us knew months ago, that Ginn's empire was in desperate financial trouble. However, according to PGA Commissioner Ty Votaw, "we had been in discussions with them on possible modifications to the agreement." Votaw said there was no forewarning of Ginn's announcement of a pullout. Indeed, last August, Ginn's President implied in a letter to the tour that Ginn would sponsor the March Champions Tour event but was not in a position to do so into the future.
Until recently, Ginn Resorts had mounted a furious defense of its viability, but in the last two weeks, they have stopped all sales and marketing efforts. There have to be a lot of nervous residents inside the gates of Hammock Beach and Reunion. That will make for some unprecedented low selling prices...as well as unprecedented risks. Isn't that always the way?
If you think you might be interested in taking advantage of the situation, let me know (use the Contact button at the top of the page). I have a relationship with real estate professionals who know the Ginn organization and the resorts in question very well. I can provide information suited to your own situation.

North Augusta Country Club failed to attract an acceptable price at auction on Thursday and is still available for sale. The Pinery comprises an adjacent tract of 35 acres already zoned for multiple-family dwellings and also available for sale. Map courtesy of J. P. King auctioneers.
As reported here in recent weeks, the private North Augusta Country Club, just a few miles from famed Augusta National, was up for auction on site at the South Carolina club on Thursday. According to local reports, it failed to command a bid sufficient for owner Fred Layman to sell the 46-year old club whose clubhouse burned to the ground in 2005, a few days after the developer purchased North Augusta. Although Layman upgraded the course in 2005, efforts to rebuild the clubhouse have been stalled by the economy and what some members of the club say is the owner's lack of desire to do so.
"[The owner] wants about $1.5 million for the place and is stupid enough to think he's going to get it," wrote
Water dominates the community of Hampton Lake in Bluffton, SC, but there is plenty of high-quality golf just outside the gates. Photo courtesy of Hampton Lake.
The best community in America, by one organization's reckoning, does not include a golf course, but that should be no problem for even the most devoted golfers. Bluffton, SC's, Hampton Lake, which just earned the prestigious "Best in American Living" Award, is within a golf cart ride of one private club -- Berkeley Hall, with 36 holes of Tom Fazio golf -- and just across the street from another, Hampton Hall, which features a Pete Dye course. John Reed, who has been developing properties in the area for 35 years, also developed the Berkeley Hall and Hampton Hall communities, as well as nearby Colleton River, which features two courses, one by Jack Nicklaus and one by Dye.
Hampton Lake received the nod at the National Home Builders Association show last week in the category of communities of more than 150 units. The awards are co-sponsored by the NHBA and Professional Builder magazine. The community opened in 2005 and spans 900 acres just nine miles from the bridge to Hilton Head Island. The area is as rich in well-regarded golf communities as any part of the southeastern U.S., a reality the developers of Hampton Lake factored into their decision to orient activities inside the gates toward a 165-acre lake rather than golf.
Hampton Hall and Berkeley Hall both offer equity memberships for just $10,000. However, dues are significantly different. At the more classic Berkeley Hall, you will pay about $12,500 per year, but membership brings full access to all the club's amenities as well as the two 18-hole golf courses. Dues at Hampton Hall and its one 18-hole course are just $4,000 per year, but only golf-related amenities are available there to Hampton Lake residents. (Hampton Lake, however, has a full complement of amenities other than golf.)
I have not played either of Berkeley Hall's two courses, but Tom Fazio is one of the nation's most consistent golf designers, and comments about the courses are uniformly positive. I walked the Hampton Hall course a couple of times while watching my son compete as a junior golfer a few years ago. The layout is what you would expect from Pete Dye, with mogul-marked fairways and bunkers shaped and sited to intimidate, at least visually. The fairways appeared to provide generous landing areas, and the large greens were not overly sloped. My major nitpick with Hampton Hall was the lack of vegetation and trees on and around the course, making a round on a hot day a brutal exercise and making the adjacent homes seem closer than they actually are.
Hampton Lake offers a total of 908 units across a range of home styles, from carriage and cottage designs to large estate homes. About 200 single-family lots remain, with prices starting at $120,000 and rising to $380,000, depending on lot size and view. Prices for finished homes begin in the $300s for the attached units and rise to seven figures. By comparison, homes in Berkeley Hall start at $725,000; Hampton Hall prices are more in line with those at Hampton Lake.
The Villas at Montelucia, a resort community at the foot of Camelback Mountain in Arizona, earned the Best in American Living award for communities of less than 150 units. The Residence at South Park near Charlotte, NC, earned the top distinction in the "smart growth/suburban" category, and Washington Town Center in Robbinsville, NJ earned the same award in the rural/exurban category. Nearby Miry Run Country Club in Robbinsville bills itself as a "public course with a private feel" and charges just $2,275 annually for a full family golf membership.
If you would like more information about Hampton Lake or any of the communities in the Bluffton, SC, area, or if you would like me to put you in touch with a pre-qualified agent who can arrange a visit and tour, please contact me and I will respond quickly.
Caledonia's par 3 third hole gives a taste of designer Mike Strantz's dramatic use of sand. The green is the deepest on the course, three levels and about 110 feet front to back.
The Golf Channel's web site is not very user friendly, according to complaints I have read at the site and elsewhere. So I hesitate to recommend anything on the site or provide a link, but I will make an exception for those who have not played Caledonia or Pawleys Plantation, two of the better golf courses on the southern end of Myrtle Beach's Grand Strand.
The five-minute video is poorly edited, but it does provide a few seconds of video from everybody's favorite Myrtle area course, Caledonia, including a stop at the club's fish chowder shack on the way to the first hole. On winter days, when the temperature is in the 50s, you can grab a cup of chowder there, a harkening back to the days when the property was home to a fish camp. Pray that you don't have to listen to someone literally sing the praises of the chowder dispenser (see the video).
I can't argue with host Charlie Rymer's recommendation of Frank's Restaurant, a Pawleys Island landmark for 25 years, although the video also features a clip of Louis's of Pawleys Island, a restaurant that went out of business months ago. And as I sit in Connecticut, where the temperature is barely above 20 degrees today, it warms my heart to see even just a few seconds of the Jack Nicklaus-designed Pawleys Plantation, my home golf club in the south. Rymer and his friends played off the old rice plantation's dyke to the par 3 17th hole, one of many tough ones on the course.
Although Pawleys Plantation is almost fully built out, a nice selection of homes are available for sale. Prices range from around $200,000 for 2 BR, 2 BA units that many people rent to visiting golfers, to patio homes starting in the $300s, to single family homes beginning around $400,000. I know Pawleys Plantation and the entire area south of Myrtle Beach very well, and would be happy to offer ideas to anyone wishing to know more about real estate, golf and the restaurants in the area.
On cool days -- say in the 50s -- the shack on the way to the first tee at Caledonia dispenses a bracing cup of chowder. Caledonia is a former fishing camp.