"Tom:
I have told myself before that I am impressed with your knowledge of landscape architecture, its history, its influence on the design styles of many things interesting and the connections to golf architecture and once again you bring a smile this morning...but if I didn't know better, I think you are trying to lure Kelly Moran back with this thread...he has a solid understanding of this subject as well and I always enjoyed his philosophical thoughts on this. This is also why I was interested in his GCA work as he seemed determined to make a clear connection between LA and GCA...and why not!"
Scott:
Has Kelly Blake Moran gone somewhere? Has he left this site for some reason? If so, I didn't know that.
I'm not sure I know what Kelly's feeling is on the connection between LA and GCA, and despite what you say about me I don't know that I know all that much about LA either, although I sure have been observing for a long, long time what may be called the "English Landscape Architecture" ideas of say a Humphrey Repton or a Capability Brown or a Gertrude Jekyll. And I certainly am interested in the philosophy of a Frederick Law Olmstead who may've coined the term landscape architect.
I don't know what Kelly's feeling is about the connection or a proper connection between LA and GCA, I only know what my basic feeling is about a connection and I've always been more than a little suspicious of it in a particular sense.
"I also suspect that you will not get too many replies on this one as I believe your concepts, while very interesting to me as an LA & GCA, may be deep for the masses here."
Maybe so, and if so I'm sorry to hear that because in my opinion what I'm talking about here just might be a very fundamental nexus which in the end just may not be all that healthy for the potential of golf course architecture in the future.
"BTW, were you an LA in a past life, or just an eccentric, happy-go-lucky english chap who likes to dabble in countryside estate gardening?"
I sure wasn't an LA in a past life but I probably am an eccentric in this one.
In the next post I'll tell you how I look at the evolution of golf course architecture as it relates to landscape architecture and its influences---how LA may've pulled GCA out of a very bad place generally in the latter part of the 19th century only to lead much of it down perhaps wrong road beginning after WW2.
I feel that the thing that got lost in the evolution is exactly how real Nature (the unidealized type) may've been lost in the transition when most everyone failed to realize that it too could be used well in golf course architecture.
What is that "unidealized" aspect of real Nature that could perhaps be used or used more? That is the real question, I suppose. Some may even call it "quirk"----some may even call some aspects of it ugly or not particularly functional for the playing of the game of golf, because of perceptions of unfairness or whatever.
I guess the question is---does Nature care what Man thinks golf is supposed to be?
It seems to me that once upon a time Man understood that that didn't even matter----that he just had to use her pretty much just as she was---eg warts and all, if you will.
That was during that time when golfers played golf across Nature in what may be referred to as paths of least resistance because he had no ability to change things. Perhaps the thought never occured to him. That was when golf was in that state that Behr referred to as 'its innocence' before it and its meaning was subjected to constant scrutiny by Man in Man's attempt to find his own meaning, his own definitions etc in it.
I'm not saying we need to go back to conditions that were obviously as rudimentary as those times but in an actual architectural sense perhaps we could in some ways---and maybe in more ways than we now realize because of our apparently constant dependence on the influences of LA in GCA in the last 50-100 years.