Okay, on to Bayside Resort, a Jack Nicklaus course that I really enjoyed. It was the first post-2000 Nicklaus course I've played, and I saw some very interesting differences between it and the Nicklaus course I know best, Pawleys Plantation (opened 1988). Bayside and Pawleys have the same back-tee slope rating of 146, but they arrive at it fairly differently. Bayside is longer, for starters (at 7,545 yards, it was the longest course I've ever played), with wider fairways and bigger greens but some really dramatic chipping areas that I thought were fantastic, especially paired with the pin positions that we saw. Anyway, on to the pictures:
#1, par four, 440/408/369/308/248
#2, par five, 614/535/517/437/426
#3, par three, 227/192/172/136/127
#4, par four, 416/378/361/340/276
#5, par four, 481/452/402/334/326
#6, par five, 555/515/489/480/446
#7, par three, 203/164/149/137/107
#8, par four, 480/431/414/397/338
#9, par four, 414/357/341/305/295
#10, par four, 429/378/361/341/298
#11, par five, 570/509/481/410/403
#12, par four, 436/398/373/362/333
#13, par three, 174/158/142/123/99
#14, par five, 556/532/491/464/429
#15, par three, 207/198/181/120/105
#16, par four, 441/408/389/269/246
#17, par four, 419/389/368/314/299
#18, par four, 483/433/418/338/324
It started raining, so we didn't get any pictures of the last hole. It's too bad, because it's a fine switchback-type hole. It warrants a right-to-left tee shot, followed by a left-to-right approach, ideally, to a fairly elusive green. Water left off the tee, and left, long, and right around the green.
Bayside is way, way better than Baywood Greens. Given ten rounds between the two, I'd go 9-1 in favor of Bayside.