David, You keep on mentioning inland, and while there are some holes inland, I still fail to see how its going to impede the success of the third course. Maybe it may have something to do with the fact I have seen the abilities of Bill Coore to TRANSITION from dunes to open Heath-like meadow, back to dunes, back to meadow, back to dunes (!) at a certain undisclosed course in Bating Hollow.
But The Woodlands doesn't have to be like anything else you've have ever seen to describe it, simply because Bill Coore is the best for creating something of its own indivudual character that may or may not have ever been visited in the schools of golf architecture. As Tom Paul has properly shown, he has grasped every school you can think of from the horrid but spectacular Plantation; the flat and featureless Talking Stick North and South; The never before used Sandhills of Nebraska, to two very different sites in the Mecca of American Golf on Long Island.
Imagine going from woodland to sandy ocean dunes , and back again, or ocean dunes to woodlands to ocean dunes again; or even just a few holes in the woods, and all ocean dunes!?! I just don't think it is fair to speculate what Bill Coore is doing, especially if you don't know what he is doing. And.......If it wasn't going to be good enough, I just don't think he would take the project, which might be getting back to the point of where you are at, but the fact remains, your going to be buying me dinner!
Also, I want to disagree with Redanman COMPLETELY on the character of the bunkers and what they should or shouldn't look like. The point is that they should resemble their natural surroundings or embrace the quirky ideas of Nature that make then totally unfomulaic. Even the National Golf Links of America does this, despite what many may think.
Just think of that image of RCD we placed here a few months ago. Which bunker would you want to be gobbled-up and swallowed by knowing you made a error in your shot?
Hallelujah!