While many Coloradans spend February playing in the snow, the state’s miserly contingent of golfers stare through their curtains, praying for the re-emergence of spring’s greens. At least these seasonal shut-ins have something special to look forward to this year: Rodeo Dunes, a golf resort in the sandhills about an hour northeast of Denver. The property is being developed by Michael Keiser, the son of the founder of Oregon’s Bandon Dunes, which tops Golf Digest’s list of the country’s best golf resorts.

This isn’t Keiser’s first foray into course development. In 2017, he and his brother co-opened Wisconsin’s Sand Valley, which is number four on Golf Digest’s list. Keiser was drawn to this spot because it boasts the same natural resources as those illustrious sites—sand and dunes, which make the resulting layout feel like it was airlifted from Scotland.

Keiser completed Rodeo Dunes’ first course (he plans to build six, plus a lodge, private residences, and a 7.5-acre putting green) last year. Although it won’t debut to the public until 2027—the turf needs to mature before thousands of golfers march across it—tee time reservations for next year open in March on the resort’s website. Rodeo Dunes spokesman Tom Ferrell expects 2027 to sell out within days: “I’ve been calling it the Taylor Swift ticket drop.” An appropriate comparison for Colorado’s new era of golf.

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