Matt,
Thanks for the review on Leatherstocking. I'm glad to hear you enjoyed the place! It really is tucked away in Central New York, with a funky name providing some mysticism to draw the visitor in. It is one of my favorite golf courses, if you hadn't realized it already!
I wanted to comment on some of the recent reviews of Leatherstocking, where I see a detachment between the comments about the golf course and the final verdict on the golf course. Folks seem to give Leatherstocking rave reviews in terms of things like "fun," "intimacy," "use of land," and "quirk." However, when it comes time to judge the course against others, the opinion is "well, it's a nice course that everyone will enjoy, but it is not top 100 material."
Why is this? It seems that these qualities of fun, charm, and universal playability make the course ideal, not just a course worth seeing. These qualities are timeless in a golf course, and they allow the course to age brilliantly. I know that many reviewers here see these qualities in Leatherstocking but refuse to place among the great courses. I get the impression that many folks want to avoid rating Leatherstocking for a few reasons: it is short, it allows for scoring, and it has a warmth that the austere championship tests typical of the "Top 100" lists cannot hope to replicate. Maybe I am in the small minority here, but I much prefer a course with great warmth and charm than one that beats the hell out of me, no matter how many majors that brutal course has hosted. Maybe we should reconsider how we rate courses, and we should place the courses that we actually enjoy ahead of the courses we think have the championship challenge that is, in reality, only relevant to a very small group of golfers.