The PGA championship will be held in two years at Pete Dye's Ocean Course at Kiawah. Things I'm not interested in pursuing in this thread:
-- The architectural bona fides of The Ocean Course vis-a-vis Whistling Straits;
-- Whistling Straits as a piece of architecture (see many other threads);
-- How allegedly bad architecture leads to allegedly dumb local rules and allegedly dumber decisions by golfers at recently played PGA championships (see the Dustin Johnson-authored
thread).
Things I am genuinely interested in finding out/discussing:
-- How are sandy areas treated for play currently at Kiawah?
-- Do any current local rules for Kiawah differentiate between sandy waste areas (as defined locally) vs. clearly defined/built fairway-greenside bunkers, which are thus viewed as hazards?
-- Will spectators at the 2012 PGA, in all likelihood, be able to walk on areas of the course that contain sand? Looking at an aerial, it appears as if they will, and my recollection of the 1991 Ryder Cup was that they (spectators) were.
-- Is it reasonable/easy to distinguish between sandy areas of the course -- and say they are not hazards -- and fairway/greenside bunkers, which clearly are hazards? Again, looking at an aerial, I can see the potential for this to be a difficult distinction -- notably the multi-fingered bunker to the left of the 18th green that looks like it transitions into one large sandy/waste area; the rightside and leftside fairway bunkers on #11 that "bleed" into a walking path (presumably to be used by spectators); similar fairway and greenside bunkering at #16; the entire left side of #15, from tee to green. That's just the back nine; the front nine looks similar in many respects.
Thanks for your thoughts and insights.