Doug,
Thanks for the kick in the butt I need to actually post something meaningful. It's not my usual style, as you well know. I'll keep my smart ass remarks for another moment!
After I read JakaB's initial post, I went looking through my Kingsley pictures. I have played the course somewhere around 8 times. I haven't taken as many pictures as one would think.
First, I have to admit that, functional or not, the hairy edged look is very appealing to me. Whether it's a traditional thought (think string trimmer), or just the contrast of color and texture, no matter. I like wispy grasses blowing around the edges of bunkers.
It's been said here many times that photography is a tool, but not always revealing the product in totality. This is the case at Kingsley. For instance, the short #2 has some nasty menacing bunkers that are compounded by the smallish size of the green, particularly at the front. Miss into a bunker short right, and you are facing a wall of sand. Miss middle left, and you'll be in some tight quartered bunkering (if you're lucky!). That is part of the genius at Kingsley. There aren't any common sizes in it's features. One bunker may be difficult because of the slope of the sand, another may be difficult because of lack of slope in the sand. There are even a few bunkers that the slope seems inverted, sort of backwards if you will. Normally we see sand sloping from low to high towards the putting surface. That's not always the case at Kingsley. Number 6, a middle length par 4, has a bunker complex short and left of the green that will most often put you in this "inverted" lie.
Number 9 at Kingsley gets a bad rap due to the difficulty of holding the green with traditional approaches. Yes, it's tough, but it's really tough once you get in the bunkers. And if you think you're in a hole in either of the front bunkers (or left, depending on tees played!), then try the back (or right!) bunker on for size. It may be the first place I've ever witnessed grass being grown on an absolutely vertical surface!
There are many other obvious examples of punishing bunkers at Kingsley, but once again, the genius may be that the greens complexes are so well thought out, that getting out of the bunkers is just a smidgen of the challenge. If there is anything easy about the bunkers at Kingsley, it might be the extracation aspect, but I think anyone would find the rest of the shot execution to be an adequate challenge.
Kingsley is a special course, and I can't help but think the bunkers are just a part of the puzzle that DeVries masterminded here. I would bet that every element was thoroughly planned out to work in harmony with each other....not a lucky shot in the dark. That includes bunker hair too.
Joe