I visited Wailua Municipal Golf Course on Kauai a few days ago and came away fascinated. I paid $48 to walk a course at an incredible location with what must be over a mile of relatively flat ocean-front property with enough rolling land to make it a near ideal site for golf. I greatly enjoyed the round and suspect this has to be one of the best low price golf options that exists anywhere.
The roar of ocean waves provides the backdrop to the entire round and this picture provides one example of the views available at the course:
However, the operation of the course is clearly lacking. It has a reputation for being packed and for yielding slow rounds. That was not the case during my visit. However, on December 26 the snack shop was not open and the vending machine was broken. Odd, given that the week between Christmas and New Years has to be one of the peak weeks of the year and the course is apparently doing poorly from a financial perspective. Cearly, there is controversy within the local government on how to handle the course. Here is an excerpt from a recent local news story:
Yukimura also believes the mayor is avoiding the main issue, which is how to make the course profitable and viable.
“The council has asked over and over again for an effective plan, but I haven’t seen anything thus far. This is the main problem, and it needs to be solved.”
http://thegardenisland.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/mayor-wants-to-veto-wailua-golf-course-alcohol-bill/article_b7f48535-347f-5617-93f4-f44b5f606cb4.htmlThe course itself is a very solid routing with very pedestrian green and bunkers. Green sizes have shrunk considerably over time and vegetation could be pruned. Despite these shortcomings, it is a very pleasant walk on a special location. I would be happy to have this course as my home course. Locals favor the course as well, particularly given a rate of around $14.
With the right changes, I suspect a course on this location could be an elite golf destination. The land is terrific and unique, with the only drawback I can see being the clay that dominates the entire island. Nonetheless, many great courses have been built on such soil.
However, I doubt that creating a world class golf course would be the best outcome. As it sits now, it provides an outstanding value to the public at a price that cannot be beaten. I assume the place could be operating profitably with appropriate management and the course could be greatly improved with some very modest investments.
If you had dictatorial power over the course would you create a world class course or would you strive for an affordable alternative that has a solid business model?