Hearing some critiques of the "walks" between the nines, I'm reminded that I worked at a club in Stamford, CT - Rockrimmon CC, which had not only a wonderful water par 3 9th (one of the best of its kind to play or admire visually) but had a singular feature as you went up the steep hill of about 120 yards to the decent 10th.
It was a tram...a mining style train outfitted to be an open air surrey. Up until 2003, this was one of the signature peculiarities of the course (a hidden gem overall), made more peculiar as it was claimed to be "the Shortest Interstate Railroad" in the country. Indeed Rockrimmon is divided by Stamford, CT and Pound Ridge, NY, with most of the course in the latter but the clubhouse and three holes in the former.
However, this was apocryphal as later research revealed the state-line was actually 30 yards north of the north terminus of the tram line, running just a few feet alongside my starter/Caddiemaster's office.
But it was a hell of a feature, and was even part of the club logo until just a few years ago. the tram died in 2003, when Otis elevator men were repairing it, failed to set the parking brake adequately and when they de-coupled it from the steel spool line, it flew liek a rocket down the hill, smashing into the modest barrier at the south station, exploded into a hundred pieces, with the frame somersaulting wildly down to the lake edge 60-70 more yards below. It was too costly to replace and too arcane to insure under modern standards so they eliminated the rail line altogether.
cheers
vk