I appreciate the different takes on the current state of golf design and the youth of today changing. I'm not sure I agree with some of the dire assessments.
There is no question that a lot of marginal golf courses came out of the last 20 or so years of design. When volume is the mantra and development gone wild is the order of the day, craft and quality are generally compromised. Let's be frank, there are plenty of architects who really shouldn't be in the business and the market will cull them.
Down here in Florida, before the bust of '07-'08, any hack that called himself a landscape designer had all the work they could handle. Most of them were pathetic and put in garbage, overcharged and their work needs a complete-re-do...this, not five years on from installation for many projects. Those folks are sucking wind or out of business now. Though the volume is less, there is still work here and the solid operators who grind are getting it.
Sounds a lot like the golf course scenario we see out there right now. Hey, when times get tough, the tough get going. Do you have to bust your ass, network more, promote and present more...hell yes. Anyone who whines because the milk and honey days are over is a candidate to get run over by the rest that understand what's required to secure work these days.
Adaptation and flexibility are the keys. Several architects I interact with, not big names, are staying plenty busy...IN THE U.S! Are they doing all new design work; of course not. But it is interesting, creative and they are being well-paid. There are a lot of talented folks that
just have to re-evalute their approach and remain persistent.
As to the texting, derelict youth of today...well, hate to break it to you, but there have always been some of these since the cavedwelling days, minus the texting. Golf is a hard game that requires access to learn. The difficulty of it eliminates 50% of the potential players straight away. Then there are those that get a taste, but drift away due to a host of reasons, cost and time commitment being two of the major factors. As to the time excuse I hear mentioned ad nauseum today...fishing has never been more popular..and that sure isn't a quick activity. To me, cost and access are most limiting for the majority.
The group that usually finds the game and embraces it for a lifetime are those that get "bitten" by this delightful, maddening, wacky sport of golf. In general, they were introduced to it by someone who had the love, passion and desire to share it with them. Historically, many of modest means found golf through caddying. Due to greed, apathy and ignorance, this vital breeding ground for rabid golfers, youthful and otherwise, has been largley, abondoned by the game.Excuses abound...they are just that, excuses! Because the pocketliners don't see a profit center, they're not interested. Ironic, the game has never been as unhealthy as is is right now. Coincidence, I think not.
Golf will always have limited participation. That is not a bad thing. It is the strident support for nuturing the elements that ensure the game is healthy, from both the perspective of the ground over which we play... and those that take up and sustain the game, is really what's most important.
Keep the faith!
Cheers,
Kris