Sedgewood Golf Course in Columbia, SC. In fact it is literally the closest "golf course" to my house at maybe 4 miles away. Most people call it "Sedgeweed". Nice rolling piece of property, mostly open with some treed-in areas on the back nine.
Greens tended to the flattish and roundish and are most likely Common Bermuda. They looked nice enough the day I was there but putted very slow and grainy and must have had a thatch problem. The ball didn't make much of a ball mark per se but every approach shot dented the green slightly and bounced high. You could feel under your feet that there was a hard subsurface underlaying a really thick, dark green layer of grass, roots and thatch. But if you could handle them Stimping about 4 it certainly wasn't the worst greens I've seen on a cheap course.
The fairways were cut very occasionally with something one step removed from a Bush-Hog (tm). During the summer I think they cut them every couple or weeks or after a big rain and the day I played the "short grass" consisted of a fairly uniform stand of some kind of bristly, stand-up meadow grass and was about 3/4" or a bit longer. Basically like the first cut of rough on many courses except the blades of grass were the consistency of broom straw. The "rough" was the same stuff Bush-Hog'd to about ankle deep. If the grass were not so sparse you'd lose a lot of balls but there was actually plenty of sandy hardpan between clumps so you were mostly hitting off that with your approach and followthrough to the ball bouncing around off the clumps of green/brown stuff.
I can't recall a single bunker filled with sand although I know there must have been some. No water hazards in play. The tee boxes IIRC were actually level, dry and had nice turf on them. Go figure.
But the biggest problem was this...we played after work on an early summer afternoon and didn't find out until we arrived that there is no potable water on the property. None at all. Signs on the sink and on the couple of rusty water spigots around the course warning that the water was not safe to drink, judging from the toilet bowl that was good advice. It looked like the water was pretty muddy. Now normally I'd think that was a gimmick to sell more bottled water or soda pop. Except there was nothing to drink for sale in the clubhouse either. Yep, heat index of 100 or so, afternoon sun and not a drop to drink except a half-empty 24-ounce bottle of Aqua Fina I happened to have with me. Fortunately the course was dead empty except for my twosome so we strolled around in 2-1/2 hours and got the hell out of there.
Worst. Course. Ever.
But at least it was only something like 12 bucks to walk (and they only had a handful of carts, all of them broken the day we were there).