Bandon Dunes 25th anniversary: Say hi to Shoe, the resort’s director of outside happiness

Rain or shine, Shoe will be beat you to the parking lot any day as director of outside happiness at Bandon Dunes.


(Editor’s note: Bandon Dunes Golf Resort is celebrating its 25th anniversary and Golfweek Travel Editor Jason Lusk put together a comprehensive package for the occasion, complete with Q&As of pivotal people in and around the operation. To see the entire package of stories, click here.)

BANDON, Ore. – A former UPS and semi-tractor driver who had lived in the area for decades, Bob Gaspar arrived at Bandon Dunes Golf resort in the 1990s to make a delivery before the resort opened. He fell in love with the place.

Gaspar quickly jumped at the chance to switch careers when offered a job by the resort’s first general manager, Josh Lesnick. Starting as caddie master, he transitioned to outside services, earning his title as director of outside happiness.

Handed the nickname Shoe by a former Golfweek editor, Gaspar handles plenty of golf bags flowing through the resort, but more importantly perhaps, he studies the guest list daily to better welcome players from around the world – he often arrives not long after midnight to read up on who is playing that day.

He provides a daily weather report via X (formerly Twitter; check him out @GolfShoeBandon), and many guests make it a point to snap a selfie with Shoe. He took the time to speak with Golfweek in the run-up to the resort’s 25th anniversary.

Bob “Shoe” Gaspar has been an employee since before the resort opened 25 years ago. (Courtesy of Bandon Dunes Golf Resort)

What was it like when you first came out to Bandon Dunes? 

I was probably the epitome of a gofer, you know. “Shoe, could you go here? Shoe, can you do this?” To me it was just fun. 

When it first appeared in the local Bandon paper that a Chicago businessman by the name of Mike Keiser was going to do us a huge favor by building a golf course out here, to a man everybody just said, “No, you know that’s not going to work. Who’s gonna come?”

But we were thinking small, you know, and Mr. Keiser thinks worldwide. He proved the world wrong, I’ll guarantee you. … He’s a brilliant person, first of all, and he’s never been much for small talk. He’s always watching, looking to see what the guest needs, what else can we do that will make their visit exceptional. 

How did the nickname Shoe come about? 

That came about in 1998. Josh Lesnick was acquainted with one of the writers, (longtime Golfweek columnist) Jeff Rude, so Josh invited him down since they were in this part of the country. The course was just playable and we weren’t open yet, and Jeff came down with three or four other writers. 

(Longtime Golfweek editor) Dave Seanor was with them, also. They pulled up on a sand dune in a van, and I went to meet them. Dave jumped out first, looked at me and he said, “You remind me of jockey Bill Shoemaker.” So from that day on they started calling me Shoe. 

It would have died out, but Josh wouldn’t let it go. There was a house that came with the property, and it was a design center where all the work was done. They took out the water heater that was in there, and it was a small little closet thing, and Josh said to me, “There’s your office.” And he nailed a shoe above it. So basically the rest is just history. 

How did your Twitter handle come about, and giving the weather ratings?

Once again, Mr. Keiser. I didn’t know anything about Twitter. One day, I think it was seven or eight years ago, he said, “Shoe, you ever thought about being on Twitter?” And I said, no. He said, “Why don’t you think about it, and why don’t you think about tweeting the weather every day?” 

Weather’s been real important to me ever since opening day. The first car pulled up, the door opened up and before the foot hit the ground, it was, “What’s the weather gonna do today?”

My rating score is based on wind and rain; it has nothing to do with the sun. If the sun never shines here and the wind is 4 to 5 mph, that would be a great day. It’s a playability number, in other words. I do it on a scale of zero to 10. I’ve never given a zero and I’ll never give a 10, because nothing’s perfect.

Bandon Dunes 25th anniversary: A step back in time to the first Bandon story by Golfweek

Golfweek first wrote about Bandon Dunes Golf Resort the year before it opened. Check out the story to see if we got things right.


Golfweek got its first look at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in 1998, when several writers visited before the first of what has become five courses even officially opened. Dave Seanor, Golfweek’s editor at the time, wrote the first national story on the new course.

The next year, Golfweek put Bandon Dunes on the magazine cover in March, two months before the grand opening, and described the layout as among the top 10 courses in the U.S. The accolades have been coming ever since.

For more details on the development of Bandon Dunes, check out developer Mike Keiser’s most recent book, “The Nature of the Game.” And keep scrolling for Seanor’s story that served as an introduction for so many to Bandon Dunes.

With the resort celebrating its 25th anniversary, Golfweek Travel Editor Jason Lusk put together a comprehensive package for the occasion, complete with Q&As of pivotal people in and around the operation. To see the entire package of stories, click here.

Picture a cross between Pebble Beach and Carnoustie – with a pinch of Pine Valley for good measure – and you have Bandon Dunes. Tentatively set to open next May, the new resort in Bandon, Oregon, already has previewers rating it as a “must-play” destination for the golf purist.

Owner Mike Keiser, a Chicagoan with a passion for golf in the Scottish tradition, imported architect David McLay Kidd of Gleneagles, Scotland, and gave him the run of 2,500 virgin acres to design only his second golf course. Not since the golden age of course construction in the 1920s has a Scottish designer left such a striking impact on American soil. Architecturally precocious at 30, Kidd created a masterpiece that’s evocative of the great links courses of his native land.

Bandon Dunes sits atop a bluff that commands a seemingly endless stretch of pristine Pacific Ocean beach. The routing meshes naturally with the existing duneland terrain; Keiser insisted that a minimum of earth be moved during construction. There is no water on the links of Bandon, although six holes abut the Pacific.

Sod-faced bunkers bring to mind Carnoustie. Wind can wreak havoc, especially on the par 3s – three of which have arresting ocean backdrops. Greens and chipping areas are configured to reward the creative ground game. Fairways are magnanimous for the resort player, but with strategically placed bunkers that provoke indecision on the tee. Stray from the short stuff, and the golfer must grapple with Scottish-like gorse and whins.

More memorable that the risks are the rewards. Stand over a putt, and the only sound is the crashing of waves. A 36-hole walk is paradise, not purgatory. And walk you must. At Bandon Dunes, which eventually will have 54 holes, caddies are the rule, not the exception.

Accommodations will include 20 suites in the clubhouse complex and between 30 and 40 cottages out of sight of the golf course.

For more details, call Bandon Dunes at 541/347-4380.