Reading the year-end newsletter on Cruden Bay's website seems to indicate that those of us who played the main course in June -- played a not-a-links!
Apparently, the course has stepped over the boundary into not-a-links territory, but as two passages indicate, the club is working to return to links status.
Firstly, as regards the brutal rough we experienced in June, the greenkeeping section includes the following passage -- this dubious-sounding term, "definition," gives one pause: (could this be a texture issue rather than a framing issue?)
A wet spring and summer provided for optimal growing conditions for the rough and this season the golf course was arguably playing at its toughest for a long time. There has been a concerted effort to bring some more definition to the golf course, however we do not wish the golf course become unplayable. To try and eliminate some of this problem going forward, there will be a large effort to thin out the rough in many areas and already you will have seen that Alister and his team have started this work. Only however after successive years of management will the rough become ‘thin and wispy’.
Bring back the wispy!
The second passage of note regards an ongoing effort to eradicate "meadow grass" from the greens:
...converting our greens back to a links type surface...The greens conversion programme has continued with good successes this season. Three overseedings have been carried out on the 18 hole course this year, during April, August and September. On several greens we are now beginning to see the fruits of this intensive programme, however we cannot hide from the fact that some greens are not in a condition which is required for Cruden Bay. As Alister has indicated previously, where the meadow grasses cannot be ‘managed out’ of a particular green surface, there will be a strong argument for relaying the surface. It goes without saying that this will be the last option, however when the spare hole becomes available, this will not be ruled out.
So how bout it: are things today so far from "true links" that we are unable to actually see that not-a-links-itis runs pandemic across the coastland, that not-a-links courses are far more extensive than virtually any of us believe, and the problem far more intractable?
Taking Campbell's comments together with the Cruden Bay letter, one suspects the answer is yes. Given Campbell's point that links must show the way to sustainability, an issue which if possible has grown significantly more important in just the past six months, it appears that leadership in this regard, as in so many other areas these days, is sorely lacking.
And if a global association of links were to form, would it be so infected with not-a-links philosophies from the start that it was marginalized? It's not as though Lundin is going to dig up their irrigation system, is it?
Mark
PS A picture of the 19th hole, a par 3, is included, along with the vaguely ominous comment, "this will then allow further development of existing holes..." We've gone around this one before; not sure what came out of that.