Walk It Off
By Lee Pace
For nearly half a century, from the advent of the motorized golf car in the 1950s through the end of the 20th century, the golf industry organized itself around extending the footprint of golf courses and generating income from cart fees.
So what if there were a hundred yards from one green to the next tee (with three income-producing residential lots shoe-horned in)?
As a doctor, obviously it’s the right thing to do for your health. We realized we would lose some income on the carts but felt it was the right thing to do. Allowing walking better met the needs of our members, which is what a private club is supposed to do anyway.”
Ellis remembers one member standing up at a meeting and suggesting they apply a “trail fee” to walkers.
Ellis told the gentleman: “We encourage people to walk and hope you will, too.”
Today, nearly one-quarter of all rounds at CCNC are walked.
“We have people in their 80s walking and carrying,” Ellis says. “To me it’s one of the special things about being a private club rather than a resort operation. You can trade off the income from carts to do the right thing. I don’t ever see that changing.”
Fortunately, if you’re playing CCNC, Pinehurst No. 2, Pine Needles, Mid Pines and many other courses in the Sandhills, you have the option to take a cart, walk and carry your bag or walk and take a trolley. At Pinehurst, there’s a caddie staff on hand and many courses in the area can provide a caddie with a day’s notice.
That’s quite the contrast from, for example, the days at Pinehurst Resort where you had to ride or take a caddie. And it wasn’t that long ago.
“So many other places allowed you to walk and carry your bag,” says Ben Bridgers, director of golf at Pinehurst. “People would ask us and we’d have to say no and it became a negative. I like to get out and walk and carry. It’s good exercise and it’s refreshing. More and more we’d hear it. It just didn’t make sense to say no.”
That evolution coincided with the opening of Gil Hanse’s renovation of the No. 4 course. Pinehurst officials wanted to restrict carts to the paths along the perimeters of each hole as it does on No. 2. Allowing push-carts made sense and fit nicely with Hanse’s view of golf that it is a walking sport.
One point of early resistance toward to push-cart at American resorts was they had what was felt in some circles as “muni-golf” feel.
“I don’t accept this stigma that a push-cart is beneath a private club, because you go to Scotland and Ireland and Australia and all the top clubs have them,” says Hanse says.
Tom Pashley, president and CEO of Pinehurst Inc., said in the spring of 2020 after his resort’s nine courses had reopened under strict Covid-containment protocols,
“One of the things I hope comes out of this is that more people will enjoy the walking game. I think that can be a nice outcome — more people walking the golf course.”
Lee Pace is a freelance golf writer who has written about Sandhills area golf for four decades and is the author of club histories about Pinehurst Resort & Country Club, Mid Pines, Pine Needles and Forest Creek.
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