Monday, May 21, 2012

May is Pink Sunsets, White Gardenias and Serious Money

When gardenias are blooming, Southern girls wear them in their hair. When the spring polo match is played at nearby Rose Hill Plantation on the mainland, pretty girls hot-walk ponies. On Hilton Head Island, May is pink sunsets, white gardenias and serious money.

A couple of weeks ago, an equestrian exposition and polo match, presented by Equus Ventures, LLC and led by Chairman Dr. Sandy Termotto, was held at the Rose Hill Plantation Equestrian Center where Hall of Fame horse racing jockey Eddie Maples and his wife, Kate, manage the center. Visitors to the center come from as far away as Dubai. The exposition competition involves gated horses such as the American Saddlebred, National Showhorse, Arabians, the Tennessee Walking Horse, the Missouri Fox Trotter, Morgans and others. Riders are attired in elegant riding habit. There is a Lowcountry Hunt demo, a Parade of Breeds that might include Paso Fino, Appaloosa, Shire, Hanoverian, Friesian, Thoroughbred, Selle Francais, Arabian, Palomino and Quarter Horse. Spectators see colorful carriages, enjoy creative tailgate picnics and better understand the powerful bond between horse and rider. The surrounding woods showboat with blooming white magnolia blossoms.

Eddie Maples was aboard the famous Secretariat ("Big Red") when he rode to victory in the Canadian International Champion Stakes.It was the revered horse's last race. Eddie has won 4,398 races including wins in the Belmont Stakes twice. He has competed in nine Kentucky Derbys. This event and others has raised over $215,000 to benefit local charities.

Serious money (serious to us) has been pouring into the Hilton Head real estate market this season. Five oceanfront homes in Sea Pines have sold and closed. One priced at $5,500,000 sold for $4,600,000; another priced at $4,900,000 sold for $4,550,000; another priced at $3,995,000 sold for $3,500,000. Occasionally we see an older oceanfront home sell in the $3 million range, then torn down to make way for a new oceanfront home. One buyer of a large, vacant oceanfront lot paid $9,600,000 and is building a handsome, spacious second home. He lives in Europe. Since the Island is close to build out, we often see interior older homes in a prime location costing close to $1 million purchased and torn down with a new home to follow. Many of these are second homes. One lovely home that is for sale, priced at $4,200,000 with 135-feet on the ocean, is only a couple of houses away from an oceanfront home formerly owned by author Patricia Cornwell.

In Wexford Plantation, an elegant mid-island development with British Colonial architectural influences and a large harbor for owners' yachts, there are a number of homes for sale in the $1.7-$3 million-plus range with owners who have already purchased another home in Wexford while prices are low. This means their properties are priced lower than what was paid for them but that doesn't bother the seller. It also means the current owner is paying two Property Owner's Assessments. Not to worry. They all love Wexford, its beautiful white, sparkling clubhouse, the safe harbor where they can access nearby rivers and the Atlantic Ocean. It is a very special community (originally developed by Marathon Oil).

Millions of dollars are being spent on renovations of existing oceanfront hotels on Hilton Head: The Westin Hotel and Spa, the Omni, Holiday Oceanfront and The Crown Plaza (now the Sonesta).

While all of this has been going on, two nature events are playing out on South Carolina's barrier islands with the arrival of two endangered species, drawn simultaneously by our warmer spring waters and the moon's cycle. One is a tiny shorebird called the Red Knot that weighs less than an iPhone, and a living fossil of the ocean floor that has been in our geological records for over 350 million years. It is the horseshoe crab. The female crab will beach at high tide and lay around 64,000 eggs in shallow water. The Red Knot will have flown four days and nights nonstop over the Atlantic Ocean from their wintering grounds in Chile and Argentina (some 18,000 miles every year) to their breeding grounds north of the Arctic circle in Canada and back. The Red Knot has only two weeks in which to double their weight.

Unfortunately, there has been a major decline in the horseshoe crab population (as well as the Red Knot) due to a quart of their blood selling for $15,000. The blood contains a compound called Limulus Amebocyte Lysate (LALO) that immediately clots around viruses, bacterial endotoxins and fungi. It is the equivalent of liquid gold for biomedicine. It is a $50 million dollar a year industry in the U.S. Serious money.

Diann Wilkinson