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These courses are in my friend's neighborhood outside Knoxville, TN called Tellico Village. You can google up "Tellico Village" or "Tellico Village Golf." Their courses are named Tanasi, Toqua, and Kahite (Tanasi was a Cherokee town that served as capital 1721-1730 and from which the state derives its name. Toqua is reportedly Cherokee for "Fish", and Kahite is reportedly Cherokee for "Run them off." Rhymes with Tahiti). |
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See how that works? |
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My breakdown: I'm here for 7 months, so I get a 6 month priority membership. My wife doesn't play so it's a single. Costs around $600. I play approximately 2x/ week. Figure $50 per round at the cash register, x approximately 52 rounds. $2600 at the cash register plus the 600 for the priority membership. 6 months of championship golf in TV costs me $3100. or approx. $517/ month.
That's not a steal by any means, especially for the conditions of the courses from October-May. However, unlike the clubs I once belonged to up north, I don't have to continue to pay the monthly dues during the non-golf seasons. Also, I don't get charged "assessments" when the club decides to fix a worn out sprinkler system, or some clubhouse item. Also, since the bulk of that expense is "pay as you play", if the weather is bad, or I'm not playing for some reason, I'm not paying. At a typical private club you are going to pay your dues, and if you don't play, you still pay. There is no "clubhouse minimum" requiring me to spend a monthly amount of dollars on food and booze. I could walk away from golf except for the camaraderie with my golf friends. I am fortunate to have been accepted into a group of 12-20 guys, someone else makes the tee times (which is why we are all Priority members), I show up, put in the $5 for the daily game, and we have a few laughs. If saving money were the only priority, I could definitely do better by going off campus, or better yet, play at the "NOT FREE BUT ALREADY PAID FOR" executive courses. I don't feel like it's a great bargain, but I feel it's a fair price for the convenience, quality, and variety. |
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Not denying that I would rather be in TV than up here. The earliest we can move permanently is Summer 2023, with Social Security benefits starting in Jan 2025, but i digress Its about comparing high season to high season prices. . and the difficulty here is comparing a flat year round price to all sorts of variable prices, where people want to argue about a special rate versus a flat rate. This type of pricing comparisons reminds me of how after a certain size threshold TV becomes too big to manage in the same way as the original design. where over time growth becomes harder to please everyone, ie happiness doesn't scale linearly with growth |
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If you golf by coupon or special rates, your reference point is discounted rates, and that is an unfortunate reference point for comparison. Golfing by coupon is severely limiting, and just a way for a high priced course to pull in the non regular customer to contribute to the annual sales on a course which is off demand hours. Not a regular business pricing. I get it that price to value is dependent upon each individuals' skill and income as well. CoachK and I went to Scotland. There was no way i was paying $400 per person per round to play on the St Andrews old course. We did play on one of the younger, cheaper, regularly priced courses, which was great at like $100+ per person. (i got one par!) We also played on a British open qualifier course, which Colin Montgomery qualified for open the week prior. We picked it because it had a castle. . not because of the cost or quality we had no idea. . coldest wettest prettiest worst day of golfing as I couldn't finish due to the cold and wet and few balls remaining. (typical great scottish golfing day sucked for the fair weather golfers here) So its kind of a waste of time arguing about people's opinions and feelings on here when the variables are so many and so intangible, and there will be no answer, just people spouting opinions with no common basis |
Too expensive
I tried the priority fee one year and felt I still had to pay too much when I played a big course so we did not do it much and therefore it was definitely not cost effective. My wife and I play executive courses 3-5 times a week and find them as challenging as we want as you can pick courses with different difficulty rating. And if I want to feel like I'm on a championship course - I can move back to the black tees. I'm not a great golfer so exec's are fine for me. If we want to play big courses, there are "deals" in nearby off-campus golf courses.
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