Ran,
I have not seen Capilano in years and frankly do not remember it. I hope to get some pictures when I am there in a couple of weeks.
As for the other courses, I cannot say how much I agree that Thompson's courses are the five strongest in Canada.
Banff Springs and Cape Breton have to be considered among the best settings in golf, though Jasper and Capilano could lay claim. Banff Springs is set in the Bow River valley and is the ideal mountain setting, with the Bow River and elevation change. Cape Breton is the notorious ocean/mountain setting, and due to the diversity it might win. St. Georges (which currently ranks 1st on Score's list) is the least dramatic of the five.
Bunkering is the weakest part of CBH, and one of the stronger parts of BS and JP. When I was at BS last year, I was amazed at how great the bunkers looked, very much in the Thompson style. JP also has wonderful bunkers, and their restoration recently (handled in house by the supt.) The bunkering on 2, 4, 5 (with the restored fairway bunker), 9, 11, 15 and 18 are very strong.
Greens would have to go to Cape Breton in my mind, subtle and wonderful. As I believe you mentioned, they have never been a central part of the conversation of CBH, but deserve to be.
Soil (again excluding Cap) would probably have to go to St. George's, which has to be considered among the best-conditioned golf courses in Canada. The advantage that SG has is the geographic location relatively, as BS, JP and CBH all face shortened seasons and variable weather.
Strategy is a tough one. I think Thompson has done such a great job with strategic choices, though many complain that Jasper has become too short to really see the true strategy, I tend to agree somewhat. The fairway bunker on five (easily carried now, but great prior), the 18th in general are two examples. Cape Breton may be the strongest, the par fives present so many option alone. Holes that stand out for me (aside from the par fives) are:
2 - A super par four, with plenty of strategy of the tee, plus an excellent green complex.
3- The ridge in the green is enough to ponder.
4- From the old tee, excellent (thou I cannot imagine you would go for it that often.)
5- The ability to use the slope would be something I would hope to see restored.
8 - Go for it or not?
9 - Placement with the tee shot cannot be stressed.
13 - Great hole, great choices.
Plus, the par fives are all a lesson in strategy.
I am going to have to go and play St. Georges again soon; I have not been there recently. I feel I did not pay it enough service.
Ran,
You have played all five, what are your thoughts? Not from a ranking standpoint, but of those features?
I hate to have to rank them, because I would not want to put any of them last.