The sun breaks as usual over Bloody Point and the warming rays brings the native birds alive. Egrets with toes delicately pointed leave their rookeries, eagles take flight looking for a morning breakfast and chickadees chirp with infinite delight. They are joined by awakened wrens and mockingbirds and soon we have a symphony sure to delight even the best composer.
But this January morning proves to be a little different. A beep ... beep...beep that sounds similar to the famous desert road runner begins to permeate the air. The melody blends in with nature's sensual song and soon dominates all that is present. A quick check of this unusual serenade seems obligatory and dressed in pajamas I make my way to the old Bloody Point Lighthouse's gratious front porch. There before me I spot the spirited intruders looking like an old film strip showing Rommel's tanks rumbling over the desert. Its a bunch of dozers and graders seeming beeping with delight as they back up over and over again on Bloody Point's sixth green. They are working feverishly to bring a once dead golf course alive....They are Davis Love's "Love Birds".
I make my way into the Lighthouse's cozy confines for a "Cup of Joe" and return to watch the spectacle from my perch on the porch's welcoming steps. Word was out that Davis Love Golf Management had been contracted to bring the course back to life but after all "us locals" have been through the last few years "seeing is truly believing. And believing I was and grinning from ear to ear as Love's Michelangelos sculpt and manicure their earthly masterpiece. I am awed by their precision and delicate touch as dozer blades meticulously define their work of art.
In a way, I must admit I feel a bit saddened by machines taking back what had been claimed by Mother Nature. After all, for a few years Bloody Point did resemble and look like a segment form television's "Life After People". Shoulder high brush had given wildlife sanctuary but for some odd reason Bloody Point seemed lonely. It just seemed that it wasn't the way it should be. So I am comforted to know that humans and wildlife alike will once again live in rich harmony. Golfers from around the world will come to enjoy Love's new masterpiece and share in the "spiritual energy" that is Bloody Point. Davis Love's Lovebirds will soon depart but their spirited song will be replaced by other perky birds singin' their little hearts out. Love songs at Bloody Point will always be in the air.