Nakoma and the Dragon:
Why the legends
keep growing
By Rebecca Larsen,
Associate Editor
GRAEAGLE, Calif. (June 22, 2002) -- This part of California is one of the hottest resort destinations in the state right now, and much of the buzz focuses on the Nakoma Resort and Spa and The Dragon, a four-year-old golf course designed by Robin Nelson.
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Golfers from all over California and Nevada want to take on the challenge, regardless of how hard it is to get to -- about an hour's drive from Reno, for example, or an hour from Lake Tahoe -- and regardless of how many balls the Dragon eats and how the Dragon scorches their handicaps.
Nakoma is not a property owned and managed by a large corporation; it's the personal dream of a couple who were trying to do something special after they retired.
The owners are Dariel and Peggy Garner, who had made a couple of fortunes
previously -- first in selling software programs to banks and then by
growing gourmet baby vegetables in Mexico at the height of the California
cuisine boom.
With their money in hand, they arrived in Graeagle in 1995 looking for a site where they could build a retirement dream house.
They found Graeagle in the Feather River country of California in a valley surrounded by mountains as gorgeous as those of Lake Tahoe or Yosemite National Park. There are a couple of small towns here -- Portola, Graeagle and Clio (the actual address for Nakoma) -- that love tourists, of course, but are free of the ticky-tacky commercialism of Lake Tahoe or the crowds that jam Yosemite. Even before the Dragon came along, the area was becoming a golf mecca with other new courses built locally in the last few years.
How Nakoma got its start
All that makes for an interesting beginning to the Garner story. But the
Garners have spun even more legends around themselves and Nakoma as time has
gone on. "We traveled all over the west looking for a place to build a dream
house -- Idaho, Oregon, you name it," Dariel says. "We put 60,000 miles on
our Bronco looking for a place to live. In 1995 we arrived in this area and
bought 1,280 acres, but we decided we couldn't put just one house on it.
Wherever we had gone, we met all kinds of people looking for the same
thing -- the perfect view property with water and sewers; so we knew we
could
sell to other people."
So the Garners decided to build a subdivision, a resort and a golf course. Within a year of purchase, they had completed all the planning requirements and were dividing their property into about 400 lots. "The first 27 homesites sold in less than a month," Dariel says. "People really do love it here."
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But this is more than just a wooded subdivision where everyone plants wildflowers instead of grass, the central clubhouse-lodge at Nakoma and the golf course that really complete the legend of the place.
The clubhouse is an almost mythical creation of wood and stone with tall spires that was built based on plans that famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright drew up in 1924. The plans were done for a country club in Wisconsin that never built the project.
The Wright clubhouse
Seventy years later, along came the Garners who hired the Taliesin Architects, Frank Lloyd Wright's firm, to design their resort. The Taliesin folks suggested using the old country club plans. "I remember standing in a spot where we were thinking about the building," says Peggy Garner, talking about the process she went through, "and seeing a pile of trash that someone had dumped there. I was upset about who would do such a thing, but I picked up an envelope that was lying there. It had an old Frank Lloyd Wright stamp on it, and I knew we were going to build the clubhouse there."
So the 22,000-square-foot clubhouse that resembles a series of massive tepees now stands on a ridge on the Garners' property. It carries the name Nakoma -- a Chippewa word that means "I do as I promise," according to the Garners. It's also a variation of "Nakomis," grandmother of Hiawatha, the Chippewa in Longfellow's "Song of Hiawatha." The Garners carried out the native American theme by placing large golden figures of an Indian maiden and warrior in a pond below the clubhouse.
The lodge-clubhouse is filled with furniture done in the style Wright once made famous. Special rock was quarried near Mexico City for the walls and for a 45-foot-tall stone fireplace and chimney.
Inside the clubhouse are a wedding chapel; a well-stocked pro shop; the Wigwam and Loggia rooms, fabulous restaurants that draw diners from Reno and Lake Tahoe-Truckee as well as the Graeagle area; and a downstairs spa where you can get a massage after your round of golf, have a body scrub or therapeutic wrap or spiff up with a manicure.
Then there are the legends spun around the Dragon, the 7,000-yard golf course that serves as the centerpiece of the Nakoma Resort. According to the Garners, they were thinking about building the course even though neither one played golf at the time. "I wanted a course that would be beautiful from every perspective and that would give a persona to the community," Dariel says.
The finished course, designed by Robin Nelson of Mill Valley, Calif., is a stunning set of 18 holes. Initially, the course was named "The Grizzly," but due to some objections from Jack Nicklaus' design firm, Peggy Garner came up with "The Dragon," a magical name that has proved to be a fantastic marketing ploy. Lost balls are "dragon food"; the club's slogan is "Send us your heroes"; holes have names like "Faith," "Hope," "Charity," "Looking Glass" and "Dragon's Pearl."
The Garners chose Nelson, who also designed Mauna Lani on the Big Island of Hawaii, because he's well known for his ability to blend courses into the lay of the land.
Fighting the Dragon
From the very first tee, you're amazed at the drama of the site. You stand
on a lofty tee looking at a wide-open fairway far below. Miles away is the
snow-capped Eureka Peak. The hole is called Dragon's Lookout. "It's our
signature hole," says Peggy Garner. But then every other hole seems like a
signature hole here.
What gives the Dragon its bite? Why is this a course with a rating/slope of 74.2/147 from the back tees and 66.6/128 from the forward? The problem is that so much strategy and precise shotmaking is required that you can never really relax. There are huge carries off tees -- especially the back tees. You're funneling your ball through narrow fairways that are thickly lined with trees. Innumerable bunkers are ready to swallow the balls that finally make it to within a few yards of the green. And the course rolls and tumbles over the landscape making for some impossible lies.
The length alone is not an issue if you choose the tee that suits your game. But you must be very, very accurate. There's no forgiveness for error and even good shots get punished sometimes.
And you get to pay a green fee of $130 to feel really bad about golf on top of it all ($75 for a twilight rate after 3 p.m.) There seem to be no end of golfers, however, eager to beat themselves up on the fairways.
What's next for Nakoma? The Garners are now building a series of plush
little villas, like miniature Nakoma clubhouses, where they are selling
fractional ownerships, much like time-shares. Depending on how much time you
buy, the purchase price ranges from $50,000 to $80,000 with an average of
$2,500 in dues to be paid annually. Villa space can also be rented by
visitors for from $575 to $775 a night. Although the price tags are steep,
the Garners say that they are almost sold out in the several villas already
built. They expect to build 27 of the one- and two-bedroom units.
A nine-hole executive course is planned for the future. The Garners also have approvals from the county to build a small luxury-style hotel.
Nakoma and the Dragon really have changed the face of Graeagle. Pay a visit and find out what all the legends are about.
If you go
The Dragon and Nakoma Resort and Spa are located 45 miles north of Lake Tahoe at 348 Bear Run in Clio, a small town near Graeagle. Call (800) 368-7786 or (530) 832-4887 for tee times or villa rentals and sales.
Fast fact: Eight mountain peaks surround the Dragon: Mills, Washington, Elwell, Eureka, Smith, Penman, Beckworth and Crocker.
Other places to golf and stay in Dragon Country
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Plumas Pines Golf Resort is located at 402 Poplar Valley Road in Graeagle. To contact (530) 836-1420 or plumaspinesgolf.com. Green fees: $65 to $75. The Golf Club at Whitehawk Ranch offers lots of scenery and plenty of streams to cross. It's located at 768 Whitehawk Drive, Clio. To contact, (800) 332-4295 or olfwhitehawk.com. Green fees: $85 to $135.
Graeagle Meadows Golf Course is located on Highway 89 in Graeagle. To contact, (530) 836-2323. Green fees: $35 to $70.
If a $575 villa suite at Nakoma is out of your price range, the Graeagle area is loaded with lots of bed and breakfast places, rustic lodges and cabins and homes and condos that can be rented through local real estate firms. Check out the town's Web site: graeagle.com.
Among the intriguing possibilities is the Feather River Inn (888-324-6400) a European style chalet in Graeagle that rents lodge rooms and cabins. It also has a newly renovated 9-hole, par-30 golf course.
There is also the Lodge and Restaurant at Whitehawk Ranch at 985 Whitehawk Drive in Clio (877-945-6343).
If you're interested in buying a share of a villa, Nakoma does offer golf-meals-lodging packages that are less than $575 a night. However, you stay at one of the outlying resorts or lodges in the area, not at Nakoma itself. Call (800) 446-5368.












