I'm sitting here in steamy south Florida having just played Emerald Dunes (Tom Fazio - shaping and framing and strategically challenging
), West Palm Beach (Dick Wilson - one of his first is fun and very playable), and Boca Rio (Robert Von Hagge's artistic hidden gem profiled on this site).
I'd be happy to discuss any of the listed courses further if anyone wants my impressions, but the one thing that occurred to me over the weekend is the significant difference in the grasses from what someone who grew up on bent in the northeast is used to.
I particularly find this true on the greens. I would argue that bent grass putting is easier, despite the higher speeds one is generally able to attain with bent. In many cases, bent has become so true and grain-free that all one needs to do is to get the putt started on the correct line and it generally holds that line.
Not so with Bermuda. Grain is a major factor, and the combination of slope and grain seem to accentuate each other more than is visually perceptive.
Short putts are where the difference is most noticeable. A poorly struck or half-hearted effort on Bermuda will almost never find the cup. I also found that those putts that don't find the exact center of the hole almost never seem to fall from the sides on Bermuda, but are apt to spin away. Being firm and decisive seems to be the key, but it's tough mentally to tell yourself to hit putts inside of 5 feet with gusto, having come from the speedy bent greens in the northeast summer drought.
I'm sure that there is some local knowledge at play here, and making the necessary adjustments would pay dividends over time, but I still imagine that day in and out, Bermuda greens have more variables to consider, and are effectively more difficult.
I'm wondering if others here have experienced the same, and reached the same conclusions.