I've got to say that the idea of a course like "Ricefields" with what Paul Cowley reports they'll do there seems really neat to me.
I don't know South Carolina, Georgia etc along the coast all that well except to drive through it about 100 times and to go down to Charleston to look for property and to spend about a day in St. Simon's Island Ga but I got to say there is a style down there along the coast---eg Charleston, Savannah, the old low-country coastal islands that exudes a style and taste that's pretty damned unique in America.
The entire culture down there seems to be one of a real easy interconnection with the entire history of that area. It seems like the people down there are so much more at-one with their land, the birds, beasts, fish, flora and fauna and the history of it all than most of the rest of us in this country. It's impressive to see in those people, and all around them along that coastal area of those states shows it, in my opinion.
And Charleston itself and the tentacles of its plantation history environs that extent out from it---Oh My God, you want to talk some real easy style and great taste--in both historic buildings, historic land use and all that goes with it---that place has it in spades.
Paul Cowley may even be one of those Civil or Revolutionary war reinactors---he's got real taste and style too. If Paul Cowley and the Love Co actually built faux ruins, faux ricefields or faux anything else from that area's history down there my bet is there're ain't no one who could tell it wasn't the real deal.
They may even be forming some kind of golf architecture niche in that way. And that's a very good thing, I think, because it highlights and also honors the fascinating history, and the remarkable early American culture of that beautiful place stretching down the Southeastern coast for a few states.
Even though Paul Cowley may come from something like New York state he seems to me like one of those southern boys who just have that easy interconnected way with their land and all there is and was about it.
Sometimes I really do wonder how in the hell we up here in this great teeming metropolis of the Northeast ever won THE WAR against those Southerners. It just had to have taken about 10 of us on that land to capture or kill one of those southern boys.