A very illuminating article, even with the extra ballast added to the storyline.
Barrier islands are always at war with mother nature. The battle is constant and unrelenting. This type of development shouldn't be permitted for there, but those with money to burn keep wanting that tall drink while they watch the sunset with their toes in the sand.
Patrick...what an example of everything golf should be...yet isn't, with today's thirst for putting profit first. Found the game as a caddie... imagine that. Guess those golf management schools are just cranking out guys by the bushel that would dedicate a critical portion their life to try and help a course survive like he did. Please.
I hope Nick and the new team get the resources they need to make it happen. To me, a Southern version of Sankaty Head, with a mainly youth-based, seasonal, summer caddie camp, with college age staff as counslers would be a superb fit for a throwback, rustic presentation. Even as forecaddies for cart golfers, the youth, properly lead, could experience some real growth and development opportunities while making decent dough, pitch in to help other staff operations when it was slow, to cover their room and meals, and with comfortable, simple cottage-style lodging, provide a cost-effective solution that has multiple benefits for the facility.
Yeh, I know, that makes too much sense, but it might actually take some effort and corporate or ownership wouldn't even begin to know where to find anyone to pull it off. The next players (owners)will be along shortly.
Cheers,
Kris