Ed:
Probably the part of design that took me the longest to get good at was learning how to hide our work ... or to put it another way, learning what kinds of construction work we would be able to hide, and what kinds we wouldn't, so that I don't get myself into a corner where I have to do something that isn't going to work.
While my goal is always to lay the course on the ground in the most natural way possible, it is seldom that everything fits neatly into a solution with 18 holes and four par-3's and four par-5's and 7000 yards from the back tees. The more flexible you are on those items, the less you'll have to fix. But it is nearly always the case that we have to do SOME earthwork, the only question is how much? As you gain more confidence over what you can control, you do take more opportunities to improve the playing character of individual holes through minor surgery.
We did way bigger things at Ballyneal and Cape Kidnappers and even Pacific Dunes than I did at High Pointe -- because I was confident that we could get away with it.
I don't know if they will show all 18 holes of Cape Kidnappers for the Kiwi Challenge this weekend, but if they do, I will tell you that we did some MAJOR earthmoving on holes 1, 4, 5, 7 and 9. But nobody ever notices. Meanwhile the back nine is about as natural as you could ever find, with the exception of the approach to #12 green, which had to be altered because the approach and green were falling away at 5% and we had to reduce that to 2%, which meant not only lowering the front of the green but lowering 75 yards of the approach, too.