McCloskey said some things very well for me. I try not to visualize one "perfect" piece of property because they are all different and each suggests its own, hopefully unique, golf holes.
I've always enjoyed working in settings which are different from one another so it helps to vary our designs. I'd love to do a true heathland course someday, but for now we're happy working on the cliffs of New Zealand and the sand in Australia, and I'm looking forward to the rock and roll and water features of Palm Desert.
If I built a course just for myself and my friends, it would respond to the land. The only things you can be sure of are:
1) it would be a walking course,
2) there would be a caddie program,
3) the green and tee complexes would be seamless,
4) short game play would be emphasized as much as long,
5) it would have a smallish clubhouse with a few overnight rooms,
6) it would be less than 7000 yards from where I played, and
7) it would be absolutely free from the clutter of homes, ball washers, tee signs, etc.