I t would appear that the greens away from the hillside, all those except 13, 4, 7 and possibly #8 are fine. In November they were relativley slow but showed pretty good improvement over July when I played them several times.
In context, you have to understand that Pacific Northwesterners are used to playing Poa in a perfect environment for that surface. They can be kept very fast and with some care can be pretty firm. The contrast between the surfaces at Chambers and those at my own club, 1 mile away, is dramatic; maybe 3 feet on the stimp meter difference (8-11).
Hindsight being what it is.........the course should have been built along the water. This would have enabled many more golfers to walk it, the light would not have been a problem, parking and clubhouse facilities could have been at the bottom of the slope. However, politics prevented that from happening. We need to be clear that These were for the most part political decisions not ones made by the architects (that would make an interesting thread).
Now what do we do? We have a course with 37,000 rounds in 2008, the green fees are discounted in the winter months to enable that to happen, and the 4 greens at the top of the slopes are struggling due to an apparent combination of poor light and 7000 more rounds per year than planned. I also wonder whether we are just far enough north to make the fescue the wrong choice for the golf course. It works in Bandon, but that is several degrees warmer in the winter.
As a taxpayer and resident, I want this project to work.