Garland,
I didn't realize we didn't usually see eye to eye. Are you really, really tall? Or, left handed?
The course is Braeben in Mississauga, ON designed by Ted Baker. I don't suppose you've heard of Ted.
I am impressed with your ability to discern that the green to tee distances are designed for cartball, based on an aerial.
Just to look at one such transition, the first hole is a par 5 that runs north to south on the east side of the property. It's an uphill hole. The most commonly used second tee for the par 3 second is directly east from the front edge of the green and across the cart path. It is a gargantuan 40 yards away from the green. The walker goes up the middle (hopefully) of the first fairway to the green, exits left and goes 40 yards to the second tee. The poor cartballer has to walk the 20 yards sideways up to the green, then back down 40 yards to the tee and then back up the 20 yards to the cart. Yup, definitely designed for the cartballer.
Just funning you Garland. But, seriously, the walk is difficult for the elevation changes brought on by literally having to go up and down a hundred foot high mountain of garbage. The elevation changes obviously make it an easier trek on a cart. But I don't think the routing is specifically designed to cater to the carts. It's a relatively low price muni course and many of the people who play there don't shell out the extra for the carts.
Peter,
I suspected you actually liked the course. It is a likeable course. The times I've played it were in late, late fall or earlt, early spring, when conditions were such that other courses were closed. In those kind of conditions it is easy to find things to be unhappy about. Maybe your day was similar. Certainly spring has been late getting here this year.
If you think those greens are small, go to Lionhead Legends, another of Mr Baker's designs. Now there are some small bizarre greens there. But it costs twice as much and carts are mandatory.
Yes, real links courses, of which arguably there are none in North America are more likely to have openings for running shots. Size of greens is dependent on the course. Not all links have huge greens like St Andrews Old. Green to tee walks are also course dependent - Royal Dornoch, Castle Stuart, and Cruden Bay come to mind of courses with some daunting green to tee walks. If you get to play real links courses, you won't think that Braeben is supposed to be a links course. It may have a bit of the look, and some of the bunkers, but otherwise it is a North American course. Arguably, you can't create a real links inland on a mountain of garbage no matter how you design it and build it. It's just not the same. The closest we can come in Southern Ontario would be Osprey Valley Heathlands and Tarandowah. But, after you've seen real links, you won't think of either of these as true links either.
Jason,
Nope, not Arthur Hills. It's Ted Baker.