I casually troll the golf course sales listings and auctions with the daft notion that I will actually buy a course and disrupt my family's otherwise quiescently satisfying existence.
Today, however, I received a sales notice for a particular course that seems to work from all angles...
So a topic:
Say you had the time and disposable income or the means to buy a golf course with your best friends or family or as a solo venture.
What factors would convince you to put your money in the pot and commit to owning a golf course rather than simply becoming a member at a private course/being content playing public courses?
Would control of all things, ie. how the course plays, walking v. carts, number of members or public players, etc. be a factor?
Would location matter? Even if it wasn't linksland, for instance, could you still love your course, or would you be taking it or yourself to therapy a few years down the road?
What about the design or ability to change the design if you didn't like it? Would the Crump or Parsinen or [insert your course designer/developer role model here] example make the highly probable headaches of ownership worthwhile for you?
What else?
I'm also curious to know if any of the practicing architects ever have had a strong desire to buy and build their own course according to "dream course" specs floating around in their wee heads in addition to work for clients, which involves varying levels of compromise.