The trick is to make an excellent golf course, not just good course for a mountain course.
Holy crap, the best--and most succinct--sentence on disjointed mountain goat golf I've ever heard.
Then again, I played Farm Links at Pursell Farms with some high school buddies a few weeks ago and to a man, they're favorite hole was the 120 foot, 120 yard, drop shot par 3 that had 9(!!) switchbacks in the cart path to get up to the tee. They said I was a snob for hating it.
So Zoomie Dell,
Do you have any reason for hating it other than it is out of favor with members of this website?
Gar-B,
Why thank you for asking. Yes I do. While I found the large ridge seperating the front of the green from the back to be one of the more solid greens on the course, I wasn't exactly enamored with the hole itself. And gosh darn-it, GCA.com didn't even enter my mind as my immediate thought on the tee was...uuuggghhh. Actually, what entered my mind was this, "So they sacrificed ease of maintenance and routing flow for this frying pan-upside-the-head of a golf hole?"
My second thought was, "Hurdzan and Fry can do better than this."
The worst part though, is that 3, 4, and 6 were very good golf holes. And they stuck a novelty hole in there.
That particular cart path with 9 switchbacks or whatever it is was purposely set up that way so that Club Car could do field testing there. The place is a living laboratory for golf industry equipment companies, chemical companies, grass seed companies, etc. Beyond just the design of the course, it really is a cool idea. And the food in the lodge is unbelievable.
Greg,
I was aware of the labratory aspect of the facility. In fact, I would go so far as to say it's as good as Longshadow over in Madison, GA. For $100 I got 36 holes of golf and a fine lunch. I saw a VERY solid set of par 4's and a bunch of different turfgrasses. Zorro being the coolest cultivar of them all! What I didn't get was a walk through cool terrain, a lesson in how to route a golf course, or very memorable or interesting set of par 3's.
That said, it's a neat trip and one I reccomend unless you've got a game at Shoal Creek or Capstone.