Tom, has it ever passed your mind to take it on, either yourself or through a consortium? Is it a question of waiting for the right price, or do you think that to bring it back would be financially out of the question? Surely all golf architects want to do a Pat Ruddy at some point in their career?
Robin:
I think about it every year. It is still a special place to me, but I recognize it is not true for enough others that it would be assured to succeed. And, realistically, if you are going to own and operate a golf course yourself, Traverse City probably isn't the smartest place to own one.
I came close to making an offer the year the course closed, and sometimes wish that I had done so while it wouldn't have been so difficult to put back together. A few of my clients even offered to put up some money to help. But, I realized that as long as I have my day job and all the responsibilities that go with it, the last thing I needed when I got home from every trip was to have to worry about what was going on out at High Pointe. I needed to spend that energy on my family, and I've been trying to honor that.
My wife was an art major, and she is the one who explained to me that real art is about the creative process, not the piece of work itself.
I do think that ten years from now I'll be semi-retired and running a course of my own design. It's possible that it will be High Pointe, after all. But it might be somewhere else, instead.