The correct answers to my pop quiz follow.
I dont have time to grade papers this weekend, so I encourage you to grade yourselves and report positive scores here. Ill double-check the math of the person who claims the highest score.
Here goes!
Hole 1: 1) Cut ridge at top of landing area and softened some contours. 2) Filled green about six feet in the middle to bridge the gap between two ridges.
Hole 2: 3) There were a couple of small cuts and fills on the bank up to the landing area, to reduce ruggedness and give better visibility for short hitters.
Hole 3: 4) Green is about five feet of cut, with most of the fill going to soften the approach. 5) Also cut away a large dune on the right side of the green to create space for the back-right pin placement.
Hole 4: 6) Cut away dune on left to build green. 7) Entire hole capped with 3 feet of sand as it was blown down to sandstone.
Hole 5: No real earthwork. The lower right half of the green is maybe 3 feet of fill taken from the right side bunker.
Hole 6:
Middle tee is ten feet of fill over the top of a bury pit. 9) Contours of fairway and approach are pretty natural, but we had to dig a drainage line 18 feet deep through the gap about 70 yards short of the green and then put it all back together. 10) Filled significantly at the back left of the green
not the green itself but the bank going down behind the deep bunker. It was a sheer drop all along the left of the green when we started.
Hole 7: No real earthwork. Some of the green is created from fill out of the bunkers on the left.
Hole 8: 11) Cut off the end of one of the ridges on the left sticking into the landing area. 12) Left half of green is four feet of fill, right side close to natural grade.
Hole 9: 13) Major cuts and fills at top of landing area to try and hold some balls up on top. 14) Both greens are pretty natural, although we had to fill a bit at the back of the upper green which fell away too quickly.
Hole 10: 15) Green is about four feet of fill.
Hole 11: 16) Green is about four feet of cut.
Hole 12: 17) Ridges on left (protecting tee #4) are all fill, as is the back of the bunker short of the green. 18) Like #4, entire hole capped with 3 feet of sand.
Hole 13: 19) Crest of landing area is cut three feet and left-to-right slope softened. 20) Like #4 and 12, entire hole capped with 3 feet of sand.
Hole 14: 21) Green is 10-15 feet of cut from top of dune ridge. 22) Left side of hole is 5-10 feet of fill to make recovery shots possible.
Hole 15: 23) Green was cut 4-5 feet but keeping size and shape of plateau. 24) Tees are filled
I think these are the only tees on the course with significant fill.
Hole 16: 25) Cut a ridge 150 yards off the tee so you could see into the fairway, and filled the bowl in front of the tee with the dirt to help short hitters. 26) Green is softened a bit but essentially natural. Fairway contours are natural.
Hole 17: 27) Filled back left of green 6-8 feet to form right-to-left shape
the ridge originally ran pretty much along the line of play with a DEEP hollow all along left side. 28) Filled swale at back right of green 4-6 feet.
Hole 18: 29) Filled a bit to create upper (blue) tee, although there was a bit of a shelf there already. 30) Cut down ridge behind the huge bunker in the fairway, and used fill to create fairway around the back. This was easily a ten-foot cut and fill. 31) Filled back right half of green 6-8 feet
the left entrance is natural grade but it fell into a deep hollow on the right, so it took us some time to decide this was the green site.
So the perfect score would be + 31 points.
I dont want to leave the impression that Pacific Dunes is not a minimalist course we left alone a thousand things and changed 31 of them, nearly all of which was done to create greens or to fix an unmowable part of a fairway. But the truth is that even the courses which are called minimalist require a lot of careful work to turn them into a golf course and a lot more than most of you are aware.