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Don Hyslop

Re: Are there places that golf does not belong?
« Reply #25 on: July 26, 2008, 11:55:17 AM »
My opinion on this subject is that I hate to see courses built on land that cannot sustain them without a huge amount of water being used in order to enable the grass to survive on the fairways. There is a time coming when these courses will cease to exist as fresh water becomes as valuable as gasoline and courses will have to rely on mother nature to supply most of its irrigation.
  Can you imagine going back to sand greens like the ones that used to exist in many dry areas?
Thompson golf holes were created to look as if they had always been there and were always meant to be there.

Ray Tennenbaum

Re: Are there places that golf does not belong?
« Reply #26 on: July 26, 2008, 12:18:59 PM »
in retrospect one of the greatest and most-overlooked assets of linksland is it's seldom useful for much else besides golf or grazing.  GA in the past fifty years has largely set that aside, largely in the interests of real estate development. 

on the other hand, a place like Chambers Bay is just about the perfect site.  reclaimed land can provide opportunities -- often relatively cheaply, often to maximum benefit for the local municipality.

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