Ira--
This belongs in another thread. My apologies for thread jacking, but this needs to be said.
I wouldn't recommend getting into the golf business. I think most of us in this DG who are in the biz are passionate about the game, but making it work as a business involves a lot of people--thousands of people between your team, your customers, and the community where you are. It's mostly true that running a golf course is like running a cat house: your customers are pretty determined to enjoy themselves when they seek out your services. Playing golf should be about having fun. As with any business or activity involving so many people, it's not quite as simple as doing something you love for your livelihood. I can't count how many times I've heard people say "if you want to play more golf, don't get in the golf business." Keeping so many people happy takes a lot of effort and luck.
Probably the most basic thing most people don't think about is this business is totally dependent on the weather. The days you miss because of bad weather, you can never make up. You must staff up and down with mother nature and that plays havoc with your staff's lives. Year after year you churn through a bunch of temporary employees, mostly kids into golf and great kids they are, and if you want to survive, you don't really have many career opportunities for the keepers. Golfers come and go and so do your employees. I'm rather loyal to my employees and a couple of key ones have been with me since they were kids, but it makes no business sense to do this. If you do this for the money, there are thousands of easier ways to make much more money than the golf business.
I enjoy what I do. I'm ancient, 70 years old and am extremely lucky to run a golf course as retirement project to keep me doing something. I'm grateful for my good fortune and content to live out my days doing what I do, but it happened so randomly I cannot endorse it for someone else, including my own kids who like it well enough but have other ambitions. Yesterday, a perfect autumn day about 75 degrees with a 15-20 mph breeze, I played golf with a group of friends and was reminded why I love this game for the thousandth time. I couldn't have been more happy and had nothing better to do, after a nap on the couch, than spout out a bunch of sentimental rubbish to my GCA.com brothers. Life is good for me, but I think you should carefully consider trading in your life as you know it for a pipe dream you love. Those cherries have bitter pits and you have to deal with them.