OBJECTIVE, UNBIASED AND ALTOGETHER HELPFUL
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Leaders at the one-day 36 hole collegiate event at Lexington Golf Club on Monday had better not take the finishing hole for granted. It is uphill and tricky, and disaster awaits if you miss the green.
I will be traveling the interstates of Virginia and the Carolinas over the coming week. Below is my itinerary. If I will be anywhere near a community in which you are interested, let me know and I will try to stop by for a quick assessment. I won't have time to play the golf courses but I will snap off a few photos for you and try to get some inside info.
I'll be traveling from Connecticut and then down through New York State and New Jersey along Interstate 287 to I-78 West and into Pennsylvania. Near Harrisburg, I'll connect with I-81 and ride it south to Lexington, VA, where I will

The pines, the doglegs, the swirling fairways all hint at a design conscious of the charms of Augusta National, just 20 minutes away from Aiken and Mount Vintage Plantation.
After the Masters ends on Sunday, the sports pundits will spend a lot of ink and airtime telling us all why Trevor Immelman was able to hang on to his lead going into Saturday, or how Retief Goosen re-discovered his putting stroke to master Augusta's greens, or (yet, once again) how Tiger was able to make his move on Saturday and vault the field. (Note: I'm picking Stephen Ames to win, for whatever that is worth.)
But I'd like to read some commentary about where the winners of the Masters have stayed during the event. I have a feeling it wasn't at a Holiday Inn Express. This could be useful in future office pools or my annual competition with friends and son (I rarely win, so I am looking for any little advantage).
I'm thinking about this especially this weekend because a few years ago, when I visited Mount
The par 4 first hole on Rees Jones' Tuckahoe nine has all the ingredients of the best mountain courses.
The Wintergreen Resort near the Blue Ridge Highway in western Virginia is not top of mind when it comes to golf vacations in the east, especially with the Greenbrier and Homestead just a few hours away. But if you catch the weather right in January, and you are so inclined, you could get in some skiing on the top of the resort's 4,000 foot high mountain in the morning and 18 quick holes in the afternoon on the fine Stoney Creek course at the base of the mountain.
Now, with significant renovations to Rees Jones' 27 hole layout at Stoney Creek, there is even more reason to put it on your list of places to play and, potentially, to live. You won't ski in June, but you will play a mighty fine group of holes.
I visited Wintergreen a few years ago and played the Shamokin and Tuckahoe
nines. The Tuckahoe course was recently renovated with a special new grass planted throughout. The new Cavalier zoysia replaces the previous bent grass fairways, according to a report in the Golf Club Industry newsletter. In addition, the club added six new tees and 300 yards in length; the Tuckahoe nine now stretches to 3,800 yards at the tips. All nine greens were resized to Jones' original specifications and replanted with a tight bent grass the course managers believe will result in smoother putting surfaces.
The resort includes an additional 18 holes at Devil's Knob on the top of the mountain. The course, designed by Ellis Maples, includes sloping fairways and dramatic views. Because of its altitude, it is closed during late fall and winter months; the Ross nines remain open all year.
Attractive homes dot the mountains surrounding the courses at Wintergreen. A nice lot at 6/10 of an acre along the 17th hole at Devils Knob is listed at $159,000. Charlottesville, home to the University of Virginia, is about 40 minutes away. If you are interested in Wintergreen, contact me and I will put you in touch with a real estate specialist who knows this interesting and impressive community.
Water comes into play on a number of holes on Wintergreen's Tuckahoe nine.

The 11th green at North Shore looks out across the marsh toward North Topsail Island.
There are plenty of out of bounds stakes around the periphery of the North Shore Country Club golf course (see review of the community in yesterday's article, below). They guard the backyards of the many nicely landscaped, mostly brick homes that frame the holes of the Sneads Ferry, NC, course. But unless you hit the ball a mile sideways, you are likely to see the white stakes only on your rides along the cart paths.
The relatively flat Bob Moore layout, opened in 1988, is quite generous with its fairways, making it an especially good track for those with handicaps of 12 and
above and a good walking course as well. It will appeal also to lady golfers who carry handicaps in the high teens and above. Its 6,300 yards from the white, or men's tees, seemed shorter than that, perhaps because I struck the ball pretty well on the late March day I played. Still, I could not get close to any of the par 5s in two shots. Water for the most part is not much in play, although on the 18th hole, lakes must be carried twice. The hole is listed at 430 but doesn't play that long. The first lake in front of the tee is easy to carry, but the second one runs from about 135 yards from the green to about 20 yards short of the front of the green. On the ninth hole, a carry of about 190 yards is necessary to clear a lake between tee and fairway, and on number 10, a stream cuts across the fairway about 30 yards from the green.
Fairway bunkers guard many of the doglegs, but again, the landing areas are so wide that I didn't find any fairway sand all day despite a few wayward drives. At greenside, the bunkers are a different story, with some pinching the entranceways down to a few yards. North Shore is at its toughest when pin positions are up front, just over a protecting bunker, and with the greens firm, it was difficult to hit even good approach shots to within reasonable birdie range.
Conditions were good for this time of the year and after a few days of on and off rain. I was relegated to cart path only yet encountered only a few mushy areas on
my walks to and from fairways and rough. The sandy soil beneath the fairways appeared to soak up the water well, and the slight elevation of the greens kept them dry. The greens putted at medium speed, but I didn't have any putts I felt were knocked off line by imperfections in the turf. The putting surfaces should be quite nice in a month or two and, potentially, fast. Slicker surfaces will help justify a slope of 128 and 70.4 rating which seemed just a wee bit overstated to me. Grass in the fairways, growing in little green tufts so far, had a ways to go, but a few warm nights ought to take care of that.
The North Shore club is semi-private and generous in its charges for non-members and members alike. The $80 green fees I paid, cart included, seemed reasonable for the layout and amenities, although North Shore's locker room is quite small. In order to join the club, you must be a resident of the adjacent community; the $15,000 initiation fee is included in the purchase of most homes and some lots. General Manager John Russell told me that the residency requirement was not a signal that North Shore may be looking to go private. Club membership includes access to North Shore's private beach club across the bridge on North Topsail Island.
Dues for North Shore are quite reasonable at $200 per month for resident members and just $125 for those who use their homes as vacation retreats. I
didn't get to sample the food in the clubhouse at North Shore - the kitchen was closed on a Monday afternoon - but the nice lady at the bar asked if I wanted a hot dog, and she repaired to the kitchen to make one up special for me. That kind of friendliness extended to the pro shop where everyone, from General Manager Russell to the pro shop staff to the chatty guys at the cart station made me feel like a member. A few days earlier I had met a North Shore member at the Camp Lejeune collegiate golf tournament; he was matched with my son and another collegian in a kind of pro-am set up. He spoke enthusiastically about the North Shore community and golf club, where he is a resident and member, and I saw nothing during my visit to qualify his enthusiasm.
North Shore Country Club will appeal most to golf and beach lovers who don't mind giving up close-by conveniences in exchange for house prices about a third to half lower than comparable golf communities along the Atlantic coast. If you should be headed south on Highway 17 toward Wilmington and Myrtle Beach, North Shore will provide a nice break and round of golf and, perhaps, a place for a vacation or retirement home.
North Shore Country Club, Highway 210, Sneads Ferry, NC. (800) 828-5035. Designer: Bob Moore. Championship (Blue) tees: 6,866 yards, rating 73.1, slope 135. Men's (White) tees: 6,358, 70.4, 128. Red (Ladies) tees: 5,039, 69.2,126. Initiation fee ($15,000; often included in home purchase); monthly dues $200. Non-resident monthly dues: $125.
For a connection to a qualified real estate agent in the area who can provide you with information on all available real estate in North Shore or out on the beach at nearby North Topsail Island, please contact me. There is no cost or obligation to you whatsoever.
When no homes are in view, the backdrops at North Shore are especially impressive.
U.S. airlines are always moaning about the cost of fuel. Logic would dictate that they pass those costs along to the flying public, based on how much fuel we use per passenger (that is, how many miles we fly).
But logic has nothing to do with air travel. Today I tried to book airline tickets for four family members from Myrtle Beach to San Francisco this coming August. Myrtle Beach is an expensive airport to fly in and out of, and the costs, at more than $500 per ticket, were well beyond what I intended to spend.
We have had good luck flying out of Charleston airport, about 100 minutes south of Myrtle Beach. I checked prices from Charleston to San Francisco for the same dates in August. The best connections were on US Airways, with all flights requiring a change of planes in Charlotte, NC. The costs seemed reasonable at $362 per ticket. But then I figured that, since there were four of us and any further savings on the cost of the tickets would be compounded, maybe we would drive the 3 1/2 hours to Charlotte and take the non-stop flight to San Fran from there. It had to be cheaper, even after we paid to park the car for a week.
Yeah, right. All non-stop flights from Charlotte, including those we would have connected to from Charleston, were $160 more than the two flights combined (Charleston to Charlotte and Charlotte to San Francisco). In the twisted world of the airline business, more is less -- the more fuel you use, the less you pay.
An attractive home behind the 16th green at North Shore Country Club's course is on the market for $585,000, reasonable given its location on the course and within a mile of the ocean. Annual property taxes are an incredibly low $1,275 (2006), although insurance rates are double that because of the threat of hurricanes.
For many who love the beach and golf, living within sight of both is an unattainable goal. On one hand, relatively few places on the eastern seaboard provide those two features in one lot; I've seen it at the Ocean Club at Kiawah, Wild Dunes on Isle of Palms and at communities in Florida. But even when you find them, such properties carry price tags only the very rich can afford.
But if you are willing to live within short driving range of a beach, rather than on it, you can combine the two lifestyles. Our family has something like that in our vacation home in Pawleys
Charming also are the property taxes, which are levied by the county, not the town of Sneads Ferry, and run less than $2,000 annually for virtually all homes.
The beach at North Topsail Island has suffered significant erosion in recent years, but there is still plenty of sand available for North Shore club members, who have access to their own sandy spot. The oceanfront Atlantis Resort is a popular place for weddings, even on a cold March day.
COMING TOMORROW: A REVIEW OF NORTH SHORE'S GOLF COURSE
In 1984, my wife and I moved to Connecticut from New York City. We bought a house in a nice neighborhood 12 miles outside of Hartford at a bargain price. Two years later, after some modest cosmetic improvements, we sold the house for a tidy profit and bought a 200-year-old house 15 minutes away.