Flashed up greens typically were not Travis's style. However, if you check out the bunkering that Travis did at Hollywood Golf Club in 1917, you will see rare examples of wildly flashed up bunkers by Travis. I like the manner in which the CC of Scranton fairways wrap around the greens. That style is consistent with Travis's original drawings at Scranton as well as at Cherry Hill Club, Stafford CC, CC of Troy and elsewhere. However, I am puzzled by the connection that is made between this style and Australia, implying that Travis was influenced by what was going on in Australia. From what I know of Travis, and the origins of his golf design ideas, that was not the case. After leaving Australia in 1884, as a 23 year old, he returned just once, for a very brief business trip, long before golf was of any interest to him. It was almost as if he had forsaken his Australian heritage; he became a naturalized U.S. Citizen in 1890. In his several writings about golf course architecture, it was always the golf courses of Great Britain and Scotland that he turned to for inspiration.