For those of you that think Black Mesa is too narrow and too penal, I'd be interested to see what you'd think of a place like Prairie Dunes. PD is perhaps similar in width to Black Mesa, but the gunch is far more penal than BM's desert and I probably lost about the same number of balls in one round at PD as I did in five rounds at BM. I'm also inclined to agree with Matt on the Pine Valley comparison--PV is far more difficult than Black Mesa.
Andy, just so you understand, this
argument discussion that Matt & I have every 6 months or so stems from one time after the group returned from the Land of Enchantment gathering. Someone asked if those who played BM would recommend it to high handicap golfers. Well, after being shouted down repeatedly for not having played threads and not being able to appreciate how better golfers play the game, I thought that was a question I could answer. Guess I was wrong about that...
I have no problem believing PV is a lot tougher than BM - I'd expect it to be, and I wouldn't necessarily recommend PV to high handicappers, either.
A lot of this discussion also goes to the heart of how people define playable for high handicappers. In a literal sense, every course should be playable, if someone knows the rules for drops and lost balls well enough! My own personal definition is simpler: Can you find your ball and play it at virtually all times within reason?
Going by my 2 rounds at BM, I would not give it a passing grade, but I am objective enough to realize I could be wrong and others can disagree.
I understand what you're saying in regards to fairway width, but I personally don't define width in terms of wide fairways, I define it in terms of whether you can find your ball and play it. I've played out of plenty of desert areas (I think they named an area after me at Eagle Mountain in Scottsdale...), but I wouldn't put BM's exterior playing areas in this category. You and Matt disagree, that's fine, we'll just have to agree to disagree (you & I, that is; Matt prefers to yell until I submit, which I won't...
).
In regards to the 2nd course, I know I wasn't the only one at the gathering who walked from 12 to 13 and looked over and saw that land and thought, why did they build the course here and not there? Some people have different ideas what constitutes dramatic terrain. That's fine, I accept that, why can't those who disagree with some of us accept it as well?