Boy, you leave town for 3 or 4 days and miss another interesting thread...
If I could add my two cents to the discussion -
- I don't think it is meaningless to talk about a Ross bunker style. Yes, he used many different styles. Yes, there are lots of variations. But the five Johnson sketches and the courses Brad gives as examples define a style that is recognizable on the ground as distinctly Ross.
His bunkers tend to have rolled faces, they tend to be built into existing terraces and ridges (or green fill pads), they tend to be more "oblong" than circular (Maxwell) and they are rarely/never amoeba-like (MacK). I think it was critical to Ross that his bunkers look natural and of a piece with the terrain of the golf course. His construction notes indicate that bunkers be built almost always into existing land forms, or at least appear that way. It is rare to see dug-out, ice cream scoop shapes like Maxwell at Southern Hills or bunkers built on mounds specifically constructed for the purpose of holding a bunker (I'm thinking of the MacK bunker in the fairway on 10 at ANGC). There is almost never a WOW! reaction to a Ross bunker as there often is with MacK or, say, RTJ. They are just there; quietly, naturally there.
All of which is not to say that there isn't plenty of variation. There is some flashing, there are some circular bunkers, there are some (though very, very few) cape and bay edges. But I don't agree with TEP that there isn't a Ross style bunker. I don't think his style was quite as catholic as TEP claims it was.
I think a lot of the apparent variation in Ross bunkering is due to (i) unsupervised construction of his courses, (ii) if supervised, then Hatch, Maples and others that headed up the Ross crews had their own personal preferences, and (iii) club/committtee tinkering, the records for which have been lost or, sometimes, intentionally destroyed.
Since Ross oversaw the construction of so little of his own work, a lot of what we think of Ross variations can be traced to the people who actually built his courses.
- A minor point, but one of the things I've noticed in my research is how the size of Ross' bunkers has gradually shrunk over the years. For example, at the Athens CC, Ross desinged several massive greenside bunkers that have shrunk to near insignificance. Has anyone seen similar "shrinkage" at other courses?
- Ross was a big proponent of grass bunkers. He designed many of them. They seem, however, to be the first to get plowed under. The Johnson sketches highlight the importance Ross placed on them. I suspect they get removed because of the mowing difficulties they present. Don't know. Any thoughts?
- Topped-shot bunkers (or, to use Brad's more felicitious phrase, "carry bunkers") appear often on Ross courses. I would guess that in the 1920's they appear in virtually every course design I've had a chance to look at. In one instance, Ross indicates in notes I have seen that he wanted them to frame a fairway, but he also wanted them at places where "framing" can't possibly be their purpose. There was an interesting thread here a couple of months ago that addressed what other purposes Ross might have had in mind with carry bunkers. I won't try to summarize it here.
- Ross' design for the Athens CC call for a number of cluster bunkers. Groups of 3 to 5 small bunkers sometimes separated by (or merging with) grass bunkers. Very interesting. I saw a little of that at Salem on TV this summer. My gues is that he used the cluster concept where he wanted a bunker for strategic purposes but the land form didn't provide any existing ridges or rises that he could dig into.
- Ross also designed what I call "foozle" bunkers. These are bunkers that tend to be 30 to 40 yards short of a green, usually in the right rough, but sometimes on the left. They can only be there to catch the really bad golfer on his worst day. Along with the carry bunkers, they are typically among the first bunkers to be removed. I would appreciate any input the tree house gang might have on their purpose. I'm stumped.