What is the difference between downland and heathland courses?
What are other examples of well known downland courses?
Thanks.
Ace
Downland courses should be open, quite hilly and on chalk subsoil - not terribly good for agriculture or animal raising. There are many more courses on downland that don't play like a good downland course should - which is essentially a hilly links in the sky (drains much better than a heathland course) - Huntercombe is a good example of what probably should be a downland course, but it is severely compromised by trees. That said, I doubt there are more than a handful of proper downland courses not compromised by trees.
The best downland course I have seen is Southerndown, which you will see next year at Buda. Another very good and hugely under-valued downland course (with proper chalk subsoil!) is
http://www.hockleygolfclub.com/pages.php/index.html, near Winchester. There are easily 5 or 6 outstanding holes and it has one of the best logos in golf! It is meant to represent the ideal servant for man.
Additionally, the M3 (right next to Hockley) was built through a massive swath of downland not all that many years ago under massive protest from all sorts of groups.
I would also mention Kington. It isn't a downland, but it shares all the same playing and visual characteristics of a downland course. I know I have said this before, but I think the Pests should be making deep tracks to Kington during Buda because it will likely be the best opportunity many will have to see this truly unique gem.
Ciao