Jason B.,
As you know, I try to prepare myself prior to visiting a course I haven't seen. For Prairie Dunes I reviewed the wonderful pictorial ('Maxwell's PD') and talked to a couple of friends who were acquainted with the course. I don't think I went into my first rounds predisposed in favor of Perry over Press, nor with the detailed knowledge of their respective holes memorized.
My favorite holes at PD, 2, 8, 9, 10, and 18, are all Perry holes. Of the Press holes, I like 5, 13, 14, and 16 the best. I think that 3 is a bit awkward (with the ball working away from the slope and slight turn in the fairway), 4 feels forced into the hillside (a lefty might see it differently) and a bit too similar to 2, and 12 just doesn't seem to fit the rest of the course (thank God they got rid of the mounding down the right side between my two visits).
I don't know that Press had less desirable land to build on. I think that we saw some missed opportunities for 11, a hole you like a lot more than I do, for a strong par 5 that the course sorely needs.
You might be right about Press being the more minimalist of the two. Personally, I think that minimalism is vastly overrated. As we discussed re: Seawane, a great opportunity MAY have been missed when the renovation did not include creating some roll to the fairways and perhaps working a bit more with the topography (watertable issues?). As long as the earth work can be accomplished in a way that looks natural and adds interest, I am all for it.
Being that I am a big fan of the strategic school with its emphasis on options and variety, PD has everything going for it but for its penal side. Just clearing back the gunch 10 yards on each side of the landing areas (including green complexes) and removing the yuccas from the bunkers would go a long ways. With firm greens, slopes, and closely mown areas, par would be more than protected and the noxious hunt for lost balls would be minimized. As we saw from our numerous excursion into the gunch, lost balls are the rule, not the exception. In fact, when you ask someone about PD, the first response you are likely to get is how tight and unforgiving it is. A course with 50 yard-wide hole corridors and wonderful greens (including Press') should be described quite differently.
Lastly, I don't understand what the USGA is trying to do. Is it afraid to expose the Seniors? The course setup appears very soft and the greens don't seem to have the speed I experienced during my two visits.
Having said all this, I am still considering joining (if they'll have me). It is probably the most comfortable club I've played as a guest, and the way they treated you and your two friends was uncommonly impressive. Unfortunately, things are a bit unsettled for me presently, and will remain so for the rest of the year.