"TEPaul,
Not to speak for Tom MacWood, but what I gleened he was trying to say was that all too often, that philosophy of whatever's popular at the time, or whatever a committee had preconceived would determine the outcome of a purported "restoration"
On this issue I think Tom MacWood and I tend to be in harmony."
Patrick:
I am not an advocate of a 'whatever is popular at the time' philosophy. Maybe Tom MacWood thinks I am but I know you don't. I'm an advocate of really good research based restoration projects as you know, although he might not.
I have seen some courses in the last few years do projects I wouldn't call restoration and either do they. I'm no advocate of those unless a golf course is just clearly really bad to start with and needs improvement.
I have never actually seen any golf course do what some of you seem to refer to as a "pure" restoration. I have seen numerous courses do restorations or what they call restorations which may not be the absolute best restorations possible in every aspect but in my opinion those projects are almost invariably so much better than the way the golf courses were if they were taking out past redesigning, as basically my golf course was, as well as a lot of negative evolution.
Tom MacWood may think Aronimink made some real mistake in their restoration project but he's never seen that golf course, and their restoration project that was far more than just bunkering, has made that golf course so much better than it had been before the project began. Basically they removed years of ill-conceived "redesign' projects to a good old Ross course. Thank God no one ever redesigned those greens.
I've told Tom MacWood this many times on here before so I don't mind saying it again. I feel he is excellent at just finding really good research material that can be used intelligently in restoration projects. That in and of itself is a talent and it's of value.
But I don't think he's much good at understanding the realities of what has to go on out in the field. He says he's seen some of that but I doubt it. I think in that area he's naive as hell---something of a dreamer/dilletante regarding what really goes on out there or should. He says he doesn't have the time to get into that side of things but for anyone who apparently spends the time he does researching raw research material that's kind of ringing hollow to me at this point.
I don't think he wants to get out there into the "in the field" side of things or really involved with some of these clubs and into the real decision making side of things because if he did he probably feels someone would accuse him for making a mistake and I just don't think he wants to put himself in that position. He probably feels if that happened it would destroy his "purist" reputation or image.
Anybody who gets involved in these things will inevitably make some mistakes but the point is so much more good comes of these restorations than bad comes of them or even if nothing at all was done to these courses that in so many ways, and in so many of the same ways, have been screwed up over time. And most of the time it isn't even architectural redesign, just sort of negative evolution----over-treeing, shrinking greens, over-irrigation, vegetating-in bunkering, maintenance practices that take out an architect's style and "look" etc.
Restoring golf courses from some of the over-arching redesign of the past, restoring courses from decades of negative evolution, is a good think in my book, and if a mistake or two is made along the way in the opinion of some "purist" like Tom MacWood, the entire restoration phenomenon is still very much worth it in may opinion.