Ted Janeczek;
Very good pick with Moselem Springs. The greens are certainly among the largest and most challenging I've seen, and they play strategically because getting to the right section of the greens takes some real thought back to the tee on many holes. Not to mention, it's just peaceful and gorgeous as hell out there!
Heading anywhere interesting this winter?
Golfnut;
Thanks for the additional information about Islands End. I would guess the Golf Digest article during the Bethpage Open probably just used the C&W tome as their research vehicle.
Dr. Bill Quirin's book, "Golf Clubs of the MGA" is fairly authoritative as far as architectural research, and generally more indepth than C&W. They list Islands End as being built in 1961 and list the architects as G. Heron & C. Martin.
I'd love to see the pics you have, and generally would love to see them posted on this site if you have that ability. My guess is that we could get a pretty good idea from the shaping, features, etc. how much of Strong might be there versus the listed amateur architects that others (including the course) suggest.
One possibility, of course, is that Strong's original course was altered to a great degree, possibly as the club became a public course under new ownership. I've seen many cases where an original course's altering led the new owners to claim the architectural attribution now belongs to them. Could be the case at Island's End.
As far as your February golf day, you certainly live up to your moniker. I'm less impressed that you were able to get in 36 holes on two different courses in a single day than I am that you made it from Montauk to Greenport in the middle of it.
Are the police in the Hamptons still looking for you?