Jud:
Thanks for starting this photo tour, looking at the photos I'm picking up little nuances on the course that I forgot were there. It was a shame for the membership that this course went public, but an absolute plus for the public duffer living in a town with a limited amount of reasonably priced options. I'd rather play Ravisloe three times than Cog #4. Only draw back is its distance from downtown.
The course has a great mix of holes:
Par 3's - a couple big tests (7 and 11) combined with the shorter holes that have great green sites (4, 6 and 15)
Short Par 4's - 1 may be a mundane hole, but 5, 16, 17 and 18 provide plenty of interest (wish there was a little more room around the 5th because that corner feels a bit cramped)
Long Par 4's - my two favorites are 9 and 10, a great back to back combo that play in a line and set a great pace for the start of the back
Par 5's - 2 and 3 back to back provide as much diversity in three shot holes as you can find, with two being nigh unreachable and three being in range but with great defenses around the green. 13 is a fun hole, but had some conditioning issues last year.
The 8th is probably the hole that represents the course as a whole the best. The playing corridor is very wide, but to end up in the best spot to approach the green (the right) you have to challenge a series of fairway bunkers. Once in the fairway, you're left befuddled by the bunkers short of the green that hide the run up area. If you're coming in from the left, you probably have to negotiate the left side bunkers, from where an up and down is no picnic. Its a hole (and a course) where picking the right line provides a tremendous benefit, but a miss is only punished by a harder shot (as opposed to a lost ball or unplayable lie).
To respond to a couple of Terry's comments, I think Ravisloe is well worth the effort to play, and would play it over the likes of Big Run and most of the west side public's mentioned. I think Pine Meadow is a better test of golf, but Ravisloe is a more interesting golf course. Shepherd's Crook and Highlands of Elgin would be my choice over Ravisloe, but there aren't many other publics I'd play in Chicago first.
To summarize, its a fun, short, cheap option with a great set of "country club" greens and enough variety to keep your interest up throughout the round. I don't think its the best public in the area, but its certainly better than a lot of its competitors. I'd love to hear Terry's take after a replay, and if you need to add a couple of drinking buddies into the mix to make your return feel like old times, I've got a couple of takers.
Last point - I think the comparisons should be made to other publics in Chicago. As a private club, it didn't crack the top tiers. As a daily fee, its top notch.