Some excellent responses.
Sean,
I knew you'd come through.
Knowing how difficult it is to capture slope in photos, there must be tremendous slope in those greens at Huntercombe.
Tom,
You definitely nailed it, and more's the pity.
I know I continue to "tilt" at windmills, but it's amazing to me golfers (who drive superintendants) can't see that slower, slopier greens produce a much wider range of speeds, making a downhill putt waaaaay different than an uphill put on a severly tilted green with a speed that tolerates it. (to say nothing of the fact it's easier to keep firm with less risk of turf loss)
Do you as an architect use internal contours in both directions to slow the ball down so a green can still have some tilt? (as well as create interest?)
I particularly enjoyed #6 at SS Blue's green.
I love a green with a consistent overall tilt .
at 2% though it's certainly hard to pick up from the fairway, and isn't ging to have a massive effect of the first bounce, like a 3-5% tilt might at a slower firmer speed, once again rewarding the player who spins it more due to higher clubhead speed
.
John S,
yes Palmetto has some tilt, exaggerated by the firmness and speed of the greens. 1,2, front of 3, 5,6,9 on the front nine come to mind.
12 is very tilted and 15 and 17 run away creating their own unique challenges, even with a wedge.
Sadly though Palmetto's green's were designed in 1930ish by Alistair MacKenzie.
#5 has already come under the knife due to green speed, and tiers have been resorted to,
Given the speeds there, it was the only choice, but that green was fantastic before at slower speeds.
(I can still remember a cut 3 iron I hit into right pin there when I was about 16 that held up on that front right for a tap in birdie-at today's speeds, not sure that could be done)
The no overseeding was the death knell as you know the winter greens there are spicy.
I was looking for modern examples and Tom pretty much summed it up.
I guess when I think of interesting greens, I think less of internal contours and tiers, and more overall slope, but I guess current green speeds make that all but impossible.
I do understand putts, pitches and chips are affected by high speed, lower tilt, but it's a shame this feature, along with width, has been diminished by modern agronomy.
Chris,
Of course tilt makes the golfer uncomfortable
but can be the integral part of the strategy hole for the golfer paying attention.
Certainly a better way than a pond ,OB, or Native grass.
John M,
Bingo. I love a green which is laid right on the land, and occasionally that land runs away from the player, yet that feature is rarely used.