I played Pine Barrens on Saturday for the first time in about 10 years. It's been an eventful 10 years, marked by my pursuing a fairly intensive program of golf architecture study, research and writing. I wanted to go back to World Woods because it is one of those places that I loved prior to developing a real interest in GCA, and because I had the chance to take a good friend.
First off, we spent Friday night at The Plantation, after getting a tip about it from a kitchen guy at The Hungry Fisherman, located just over the Withlacoochee River bridge on Route 44 in the middle of nowhere. What a great tip! Spent the evening in the bar and the sunrise hour exploring the grounds of the place.
http://www.plantationoncrystalriver.com/Then on to Pine Barrens. I won't bore with a long review, although I will say that in between PB visits, I have visited and played many of America's most notable courses. Pine Barrens stands with any of them. If you could see the ocean from there, it would be world top 10, IMO. It's THAT good. Minimalist Fazio (yes, an oxymoron that belong up there with jumbo shrimp and government intelligence). Strategic choices abound. The integration of the sandy barrens into the design at times sublime and other times striking. The internal countours of the greens and their surrounds are among the best I've ever seen. I played the same ball all the way around. Playability is a 10, with interest provided by a number of natural elements including woods, sand, fallaway shoulders with closely mown chipping areas and all kinds of options.
The biggest change I noticed was on the short-4 15th, where trees used to obscure the landing area over the quarry and to the right of the green. They have totally opened it up, and it now invites the player visually to give it a go - although the risk is significant.
World Woods Pine Barrens belongs in the very top tier discussion on American golf architecture. They would kill in merchandising if they had a decent logo. I HATE the World Woods name. Sounds cheesy and ridiculous, but Pine Barrens is everything golf can and should be. 100% a FAN!