This thread has its good points and its bad points. Focusing on the good...
It has opened my eyes as to why I love the Sand Hills of Nebraska so much...and less specifically, why I travel many miles to play specific golf courses. And that reason is,
they are off the charts amazing!!!I invited some
clients friends from Georgia to play golf with me in Nebraska a little over a year ago and they laughed at me and said, "Why would I travel to Nebraska to play golf? We've got good golf right here in Georgia." But I finally got them out to the Sand Hills a few months ago. Their lives have been changed because of it. They talk about it all the time and they can't wait to go back. They've never seen anything like it...and I've never seen them have as much fun on a golf course.
That is why people pay initiation fees and dues for a place they go to a handful of times per year. Oh yeah, airline tickets, rental car fees, etc. Frankly, I've never calculated the cost per round for my enjoyment of Dismal, or Rivermont, or St. Ives for that matter. I don't care. I love it there and I want to be a member and play golf there. That is why I am a member.
Similar things can be said for why I'll travel back to Scotland and why I want to see some other courses in other parts of the country and the world. To see again, and experience for the first time, unique, interesting, and well designed golf courses in different landscapes. Good golf in The South is different from golf in the Sand Hills which is different from golf on the linksland of Scotland. And, in my mind, golfers and golf course architectural enthusiasts need to see these types of places and experience how good golf can be in different locals.
To heck with the price per round. Just like the sales person at Pinehurst told me, "True lovers of golf course architecture don't consider the prices of places they play."