http://jayflemma.thegolfspace.com/?p=4951From the Open letter to Pat:
In a chapter titled, “GOLF WITH STAR VIEWS – Bombarded by beauty at every turn”. You write:
“
Almost every golf course offers a few eureka [sic] moments. But at Rosapenna it is like living in a picture postcard all the way with…ocean and mountain views to bedazzle and bewitch the player from start to finish….I decided this was a place to give birth to a new descriptive phrase: Star Views.” (p. 22).
Pat, to use the common phrase, I’m not feelin’ it.
You describe the concept as one purely of natural setting: “
Tees, fairways, greens, entire holes were to be designed to provide at once great golf and great visuals…thirteen of the holes provide Star Views from their tees with fairways and greens in full view together with their magnificent settings and backdrops. They sit there like diamonds on a precious necklace.”
You further explain them as “iconic views”, asserting that because of “Star Views” “Romance is quickly added to this golfing safari”, and you feel that they “transform Rosapenna into the golfing Naples of the Atlantic.”
Precious necklace?? Golfing safari?? Naples of the Atlantic?? I dub thee “King of the Mixed Metaphor.”
All levity aside this is no more than the doctrine of framing, which spoon-feeds the shot requirements to the golfer – a doctrine which is, thankfully, in severe decline in this Second Golden Age of Golf Course Architecture....