
a man named shoe
With a career that’s had more acts than a Shakespearian play, and jobs that included working for the United Parcel Service and the Coast Guard, no one could have anticipated that Bob Gaspar would become famous for being the face of Bandon Dunes.
With a career that’s had more acts than a Shakespearian play, and jobs that included working for the United Parcel Service and the Coast Guard, no one could have anticipated that Bob Gaspar would become famous for being the face of Bandon Dunes.
The smiling face of Gaspar, known by his nickname of “Shoe” during his time at Bandon, has greeted visitors for two decades at the resort, and along the way became recognized for his incredible memory (aided by exhaustive research) and his famed Twitter account that details the weather each day on the Oregon Coast.
From carving bunkers on the courses at Bandon to searching for the perfect day (hint: he hasn’t had one yet), Shoe is, as the Coast Guard motto says, “Semper Paratus,”—always ready.
I was never looking for a job at Bandon, but I read about this new course in the local newspaper. I was getting ready to retire. I was a Teamster and driving a truck and I knew they were doing something out there and that a man named Mike Keiser was going to do us a favor by building a golf course on a gorse-infested property we all used to ride our bikes on. I had lived in the area since 1980, and we’d go out there and go fishing in the lakes. To us, the property was worth nothing. I don’t have Mike’s vision. And I drove out to deliver some mulch and there was no one around. I walked over a sand dune and they were busily taking trees off the first fairway of what would become Bandon Dunes. My interest was spiked, and I didn’t have a plan for my retirement. A friend of mine, Shorty Dow, lived on the property and gave me a tour. We stepped off the 10th hole and I looked at it and thought, “This is amazing. I need to be part of this.” They were advertising in a local newspaper looking for caddies, and right away that caught my interest. At the time I was working in cranberry bogs—a tough job to say the least. My wife came out to say I got a call from Bandon Dunes, and I never returned to that cranberry bog.
when we opened bandon it was a horrible scramble because none of us knew what we were doing. I’d been there for three months and Josh Lesnik, the new GM, said I needed a job. I was basically a gofer doing whatever needed to get done. In early 1999, Josh asked what I wanted to do. I told him caddiemaster, which I thought would be fun. I wasn’t caddiemaster for long because they recognized the need for someone to connect with guests. I was outside services manager and one day the director of golf asked me to get out of operations and told me to do what I do best. That was the job description. Some would think that was really neat, but it wasn’t. I had to develop whatever I wanted to do, and it gradually became a role of being interested in who our guests were.
my role became interacting and being interested in our guests and figuring out who they are. When I look at the tee sheet I try to figure out where our guests are from, if they’ve been here before or if they are from an interesting town. I do some research. Earlier in my life I’d worked for the Coast Guard; and their motto is Semper Paratus or “always ready.” I’ve made it a point all my life to be prepared. After 21 years at Bandon, I’ve met a lot of our guests and they expect me to remember who they are. I go through great pains to do exactly that.