As a relative newcomer to the game of golf and an aspiring student of golf course architecture, I am becoming a little exasperated by the use of Out of Bounds lines on some courses.
I would have assumed that the original purpose of OoB posts was to mark the boundary of the course, avoiding the spectacle of golfers attempting to play shots from adjacent farmers' fields, neighbouring gardens, or from a public road. Where a potentially dangerous fast-flowing river runs through a course I can see that the banks should be OoB to help prevent accidental fallings in while attempting to make a shot. Much the same for deep lakes or cliff edges.
OoB lines between fairways strike me as being a symptom of poor initial design and unimaginative use of a flat field by simply having holes run up and down parallel with each other.
What irks me however, is the use of OoB lines simply to alter the playing characteristics of a hole. I use the par 3 4th at my own club, Reddish Vale, as an example only because I am so familiar with it.
A you can see, OoB runs all the way from the tee to the green along the left-hand side. This however, is not along the line of any natural boundary. As can be seen from an aerial shot there is plenty of room to the left of the green - indeed it is an area mown to fairway standards by the green staff. The path running through it leads to the 5th tee - it is not a public path and the only people likely to be on it are the players leaving the green.
This hole is a very tricky little one with the ground falling sharply away to the left. If the OoB line was moved further to the left as in my pic above it would not be any easier as any shot from the 'new' area would be a tough one. It would however, give a hole with a far more 'natural' feel.
I tentatively raised this question in the clubhouse bar on Friday night. Agreement was unanimous that moving the line would be an improvement. So why is it the way it is? Because it's 'always been that way'!
I've seen similar situations on other courses. Using OoB like this in an artificial way to alter the characteristics of a hole from its natural situation without good reason strikes me as contrived conceit. I can't believe it is generally the work of the original designer - more likely a subsequent and long forgotten greens committee with an agenda of its own...
Has anyone else got examples? Or is it just me that gets a bit miffed by such things?
Incidentally, the architect at Reddish Vale was one Alister MacKenzie. I really hope this wasn't his original design for the hole!