“Second homes: Golf, skiing and sunsets in Little Traverse Bay, Mich.” plus 3 more |
- Second homes: Golf, skiing and sunsets in Little Traverse Bay, Mich.
- Differing styles, but two women golf pros - Annette Thompson and Donna White - earn kudos
- Local golf tournaments
- Golf course's future no sure thing
| Second homes: Golf, skiing and sunsets in Little Traverse Bay, Mich. Posted: 01 Jun 2010 10:22 AM PDT Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it.
| Like Sun Valley in Idaho, Canada's Banff Springs in Alberta and other remote resort areas, tourism to Little Traverse Bay was launched to create rail passenger demand. Among the first to arrive was a Methodist community, which founded the Bay View Association, a communal cottage colony and National Historic Landmark with 440 Victorian cottages, still owned by worshipers. Several religious vacation enclaves called "associations" sprouted around Little Traverse Bay. The bay is the northwesternmost inlet of Lake Michigan on the Lower Peninsula. In the center is the waterfront city of Petoskey, which is filled with shops and restaurants — but is not as popular for vacation homes. There also are large inland lakes close to Lake Michigan, including Charlevoix, the state's third largest, creating an abundance of waterfront property. Water is a big draw, as are golf and skiing. The first ski lift was built at Boyne Mountain in 1948. There are now three large ski resorts, as well as six golf courses for summer visitors. A big golf draw is Bay Harbor, with a 27-hole course considered one of the greatest achievements of acclaimed architect Arthur Hills. It anchors a luxury waterfront, marina and equestrian community on the shores of Lake Michigan.
"Most of my sales, almost 90%, are second homes," says John Constand, an independent agent at Boyne Realty Resort Sales. "Summer is the biggest draw. People visit and then say, 'I have to have this.' Skiing is popular, too, but most ski-area owners also come in summer." One benefit is the summer rental market is strong, allowing owners to generate income. The majority of buyers are from Michigan, followed by Indiana, Illinois and Ohio. According to Constand, waterfront property directly on Lake Michigan is the highest end of the market, followed by bigger inland lakes, then the ski resorts. Affordability is a big attraction: Houses on desirable inland lakes can be had for $350,000, and ski-area condos start under $75,000. Another big appeal is sunset. The sight of the sun dropping behind Lake Michigan is spectacular, and west-facing homes command a premium of 25% to 30% over identical properties looking to the east, Constand says. A look at three Little Traverse Bay neighborhoods • Bay Harbor: Named "Best Development, USA" in CNBC's America's Residential Property Awards, this 1,200-acre community has a Top 100 golf course, large marina, and tennis and equestrian centers. It's the most expensive in the region but offers a varied price range, with 32 distinct enclaves plus condo hotels. "There's big premium on waterfront," says real estate agent John Constand. "There are about 60 homes directly on the lake, and they run $1.3 million to $20 million, while homes inland start at $800,000." Condos and townhouses range from $400,000 to $500,000. Condo hotel rooms begin at under $200,000. • Ski resorts: The three resorts are Nub's Nob, Boyne Highlands and Boyne Mountain. The two Boyne resorts have the bulk of the real estate and golf offerings, with four courses at Highlands and two at Boyne Mountain. "Highlands gets more overnight traffic and is slightly more expensive," Constand says. Condos start at $75,000, and single-family houses at $450,000. Both have a wide mix of condos, condo hotels and single-family houses. • Inland lakes: Sheltered waters are calmer than Lake Michigan, and many prefer them for water sports. The two biggest are Charlevoix and Walloon. Both are popular for vacation homes and are close to the shores of Lake Michigan. Petoskey is between Walloon and Lake Michigan. All Lake Michigan waterfront faces west, but these have homes on both sides. Those facing east are 25%-30% less, with single-family houses only, beginning around $350,000 and reaching more than $2 million. Inn at Bay Harbor Boyne Highlands Resort ON THE MARKET
Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Differing styles, but two women golf pros - Annette Thompson and Donna White - earn kudos Posted: 01 Jun 2010 12:25 PM PDT Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. By Edgar Thompson Palm Beach Post Staff Writer Annette Thompson grew up on a North Carolina tobacco farm in the shadow of the exclusive Pinehurst Golf Resort. But Thompson didn't play her first round until she was in college because world-class golf wasn't available to the masses. "Farming and golf were mutually exclusive," Thompson, 66, said. Donna White played on the LPGA Tour for 14 years. After her playing career, she chose to show what she had learned on the golf course. "My passion always has been teaching," she said. While both women took different paths, they both now teach golf in Palm Beach County: Thompson is a BallenIsles teaching pro while White is owner of Golf Professional Services Inc., which provides golf instruction. And both are getting noticed. In Golf Digest's first-ever ranking of women professionals, scheduled to appear in June during Women's Golf month, Thompson is ranked No. 10 and White No. 11 in a poll of more than 1,000 fellow women pros. "The thing that makes it special to me is it's voted on by other teachers and not just somebody who knows your name or a student who says you're good," Thompson said. While their paths to teaching were different, both Thompson, 66, and White, 55, have many similarities. Both were born in a small town in North Carolina, entered college at UNC-Greensboro and were mentored there by Ellen Griffin, one of the best-known woman golf teachers in U.S. history. And since the early 1980s, Thompson and White have been fixtures in the local golf scene. "It's kind of eerie isn't it?" Thompson said of the similarities. Each also has an approach that goes beyond teaching a proper grip, good set-up and sound swing mechanics. Thompson never went pro - "My golfing career is much more about being in the 80s than the 70s," she jokes - but she applies a master's degree in sports psychology to find out what buttons to push with each client. "It's the same game, but you never teach two people the same way," said Thompson, who has coached golf at Vassar College, Smith College and Penn State. White also tailors her lesson to the individual, but her pro career gives her a different perspective. "My playing background definitely adds some credibility," said White, a three-time LPGA winner before a life-threatening sinus infection ended her career in 1992. White's fascination with teaching often filled her LPGA off-season. She coached the women's golf team at Palm Beach Community College (now Palm Beach State College), worked with the Special Olympics and gave lessons to new home buyers. "If you bought a house in Wellington, you got a golf clinic with me," she said. White's head for business won her company the contract at Okeeheelee Golf Course in 1995. In 2007, her company was awarded contracts with John Prince Golf Learning Center and Park Ridge Golf Course. White has a staff of 16 instructors and runs one of the nation's largest junior golf programs. "While I still coach and train players of all ability, my true mission is to provide affordable programming and introduce new golfers to the game," she said. Lynn Marriott, No. 2 in Golf Digest's rankings, played for Thompson at Penn State, as did 32nd-ranked Patti Butcher. Thompson, who moved to South Florida in 1981, returns to North Carolina every May and June to work at the schools in Southern Pines run by Peggy Kirk Bell, who, at age 88, is No. 4 on the Golf Digest list. Wherever and whoever she teaches, Thompson, whose client list is one-third men, believes she can find a way to get through to any client. "It's a different body, it's a different personality, different potential, different interests," she said. "People have different reasons they play golf." But everyone wants to play well. Even the top teachers can't guarantee success, but it's sure good for business. "You can read and study all the things you want; you can go to every seminar," White said, "But that last lesson is going to be your best marketing tool." Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. | |
| Posted: 01 Jun 2010 07:07 AM PDT Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. May 24 June 12 The Contractors with a Cause Golf Tournament benefiting the Jimmy Fund will take place at the Tradition Golf Club in Wallingford. The fee is $145 per golfer. Registration is 9:30 a.m. with a shotgun start at 11. Contact (866) 521-4653 or www.contractorswithacause.org June 18 July 26 Please send non-profit golf tournament listings to localsports@newhavenregister.com with subject golf tournament. Please send non-profit golf tournament listings to localsports@newhavenregister.com with subject golf tournament. Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. | |
| Golf course's future no sure thing Posted: 01 Jun 2010 12:12 AM PDT Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. Long before the first shot was struck in the 71st Senior PGA Championship, the first major event at Colorado Golf Club never seemed to merely be about four days of play. Whether it was the boldly stated intentions of the facility's management to be a player on a national stage, or the love-at-first-sight palpitations from the PGA of America, the sense has always been that last week in Parker was a first date to test the waters for a possible long- term commitment. Now that the final putt has dropped, it's clear that both sides have a lot to offer, from a star-studded leaderboard throughout the week, to the drama of Fred Couples' back-to-back eagles on the back nine Sunday, to the three-man playoff — all played out amid spectacular views that were impressive on the TV screen — as the Ben Crenshaw/Bill Coore design delivered. And the PGA noticed. With officials undoubtedly looking at the course, as well as the rest of the 1,700 acres the property has to offer, there had to be visions of future Ryder Cups and PGA Championships dancing in their heads. "Colorado Golf Club is that good," said Joe Steranka, the PGA's CEO. But there are some difficult choices that will have to be made to determine if a long-term relationship is in the cards. The most pressing issue is the CGC's stability. Even before the Senior PGA, there were rumors the facility would be closing as soon as the winner was presented the trophy. The club's financial difficulties were brought up by players in more than one post-round news conference, and the sight of the incomplete clubhouse, and the sand and dirt that swirled near it, brought up more images of a Hope and Crosby road movie than a long-standing association with golf. Unstable future Steranka admitted the uncertainty was a distraction for the tournament, but the problems are also an ongoing concern. One way to wed the club and the PGA of America, for example, would be for the latter to take over at CGC. The PGA wants to establish a stronghold in the West for its major championships. The organization already owns and operates Valhalla, the Kentucky site that hosted the 1996 and 2000 PGA Championships and the 2008 Ryder Cup. That course is kept in major championship condition, and it wouldn't be hard for the same to be done at Colorado Golf Club, which would see an influx of working capital and clinch a spot in the PGA's major rotation. It was revealed last week that such conversations have taken place. Mike McGetrick, the founding partner of CGC, said that while the club would be interested, he admitted that now it "isn't a good fit" as far as the PGA is concerned. Steranka concurred. "The talks were never serious, in part because of the uncertainty of what's going on here," he said. "Valhalla is still a Kentucky-run private club; while the PGA owns it, we're very hands-off in the management. In my mind, corporate-run clubs lose their individuality, the personal culture. "It's people who drive successful clubs, and that still has to be determined. Who's going to drive the future of Colorado Golf Club?" City, state to help? Looking at other golf tournaments in the state, most notably The International, the former Denver-area stop on the PGA Tour, Steranka also expressed disappointment over what the PGA of America considered lack of support from the city of Denver and the state government. Both have been making moves in recent years to position themselves as players in athletic events, whether winning the 2011 NCAA Women's Final Four or the growing talk of a bid for the Winter Olympics. That same machinery would certainly spring into motion if the PGA of America were to announce that a Ryder Cup or PGA Championship were coming to the area, but it's clear that fence-mending would have to be done first. "We know how they supported The International, and maybe it was a case of them having that event for what, 20 years?" Steranka said. "But we're proud of the job creation and the tax revenue situation from our events and the fact that this event is in 122 countries, showcasing the beautiful views from this state. "It's a big deal, and we want people to know that it's a big deal in advance, not after we award an event. This was their chance to tell us, 'OK, we're on board.' " While some might interpret that as so much posturing, the civic element is crucial for events like the Ryder Cup or PGA Championship, which Steranka estimates is five to 10 times bigger than the Senior PGA. Last weekend in Parker, a larger-than-expected walk- up crowd Friday led to delays of up to 30 minutes in moving people from outlying parking lots to the course. The problem was immediately rectified, but it was one more question to be answered. "Could you multiply what we have here this week by five, six, or 10 and still deliver the experience we want to deliver?" Steranka asked. "And if we had six times the buses, I don't know that we have six times the space (for cars)." However, Steranka was quick to label the tournament a success — just the first, hesitant step down the aisle. "The priority is the course," he said. "And in an area this size, you should be able to figure out the rest of it." Anthony Cotton: 303-954-1292 or acotton@denverpost.com Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| You are subscribed to email updates from Yahoo! News Search Results for Golf To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
| Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 | |

0 comments:
Post a Comment