Osprey Valley Heathlands was designed 15 years ago by Doug Carrick. The early years were rocky from an ownership point of view, but the course has consistently been in the top 25 in Canada.
The course has a north loop and a south loop surrounding what was to be the clubhouse. Regrettably the clubhouse was never built - all that remains is a derelict foundation. For the first 12 years the course was operated out of the maintenance building at the south end of the property. Consequently, play was started on the third hole.
Five years ago two more courses were built to the east of the Heathlands. Eventually a new clubhouse was built between the two new courses and maybe 300 yards across a railway track from the old clubhouse foundation. The management decided to start people on what was the eleventh hole which is about 200 yards closer than the intended first hole.
The path from the eleventh tee to the first tee skirts the tenth hole, a short par 3 across water and playing away from the path.
Recently new scorecards were printed reflecting the new starting point. The new course plays as 37-34 nines at 3500-2900 yards. The 18th is now a short par 3.
Whenever I can, I wander over to the original first and start there as the course flows so much more nicely the way it was designed.
The holes will always make it a very good course, but I can't help feel that the new ordering detracts from the course and the experience. Is this just a small transgression or is it a major architectural going to hell mistake?