I go away for a day and a turf battle of what is or is not the Peninsula, and what is a golf snob breaks out ...
A few comments:
Crystal Springs: A decent layout, holes altered or compromised due to driving range / road expansion (I'm surprised no one commented on the mobile home park off the 9th green / 10th tee
) but due to normally horrible conditions, steep green fees, fickle weather, it is not a desireable place to play.
That being said, there a few holes already mentioned that are worth the visit plus a driveable par-4 and some decent bunkering on the backside.
Shoreline: Yes, you might consider it the best public on the Peninsula but that isn't saying much. Conditions are usually spotty at best, with or without the coots and geese.
The Peninsula: The southern border I would define as Menlo Park, maybe Palo Alto (although Palo Alto is at times defined as the birthplace of Silicon Valley so it can't be both
) and goes as far north as Burlingame / Millbrae. San Francisco should never be defined as part of the Peninsula, it is The City.
Callippe Preserve: I've played it once, on a cold morning in February. It deserves, for me, another look ...
Metropolitan: I have been a big fan of Metro however, the last 2 times I have played there, the pace of play has been horrible, 4 hours to play 13 holes is not going to make be a repeat customer.
Monarch Bay: Another stake in the ground that makes East Bay muni's better than the Peninsula. Unique bunkering, many challenging holes but the one downside is the conditioning, not for a lack of trying by the course operators or the city.
My ranking of the inner bay courses would put Monarch Bay at the top followed by Metro, then Shoreline, Poplar, etc.
As for Poppy Ridge and Wente ... the primary advantage of Poppy is that there are usually open tee times and pace of play is decent. Wente is higher priced and unwalkable ....
And the farther east you go, a Delta View at $ 40 and half a tank of gas to get there is not a bargain ...