Rod Whitman's Wolf Creek course (1983) in Ponoka, Alta. is frequented by rural golfers, as opposed to typical big city, country club type golfers who tend to more often demanded immaculate conditioning. The club has a very small maintenance budget, something like $300,000-$400,000 Canadian for 27 holes, if my memory serves me correctly.
Wolf Creek superintendent Rick David maintains the tees, fairways, and greens perfectly. The turf is generally in very good condition. But the peripheries and the hazards are basically left alone, which gives the course an incomparable natural appearance.
Partly on instruction from Whitman, superintendent Rick David has let the bunkers truly evolve naturally over 20 years. These days many of bunkers at Wolf Creek feature broken down lips and grass encroaching into the sand. In my opinion, they look fantastic, and very original as a result.
Bunker maintenance is very site specific. In other words, the ranchers who play at Wolf Creek are much less demanding than members of Edmonton's Mayfair G&CC, for example, where the bunkers are edged, filled with non-indigenous, imported sand, and rake regularly. As a result, the Mayfair's bunkers are very sterile and comparatively unnatural in appearance.
That's what the club's membership demands though, and because of that I imagine Mayfair's bunker maintenance budget (if they broke it down) would be 10x Wolf Creek's bunker maintenance budget.