Bryan
1. I never throw away my blingy bag thingies! My Tiggles blingy thingy now resides proudly on my "golf mess" table in my "office" next to my Pebble Beach, Castle Stuart, 1990 Sawgrass Country Club Men's Championship and FOB (Friends of Barney) blingies, each of which I lift in separate 25 reps of "golf elbow" physiotherapy inbetween GCA.com posts.
2. As for holes 3 and 4. Three is a man-sized par-3 from the blacks, with a nice Scylla (bunker right) and Charybdis (hollow left) touch to it. When I played it, the white tees were on the right (seems they have two white tees on this hole), and from there it was a really nice downwind 8 iron which I (luckily) hit a teeny bit fat, raising a puff of sand as it landed just over the RH bunker, settling down 8 feet pin high to the right. One of my playing partners ended up in the hollow to the left but got up and down with a canny bump and run. Standing on the green and looking backwards to the right, the views of the sands and the North Sea were as good as any course in Scotland (including Dornoch!). Interestingly, the sliver of blue to the left of the green (from the tee) is in fact a tidal burn which is out of play on this hole but very much so on the next. I missed my birdie putt (of course), but I still give the hole 2**.
3. And yes, Mark F, the green looks like almost nothing at nearby Royal Aberdeen (or Cruden Bay or Dornoch or name your auld course....) but it does have a bit of Murcar in it and a lot of most of the new courses I have played over the past 10-15 years (e.g. Kingsbarns, Castle Stuart, Pacific Dunes, Applebrook, Old Macdonald and Dallas National). Unnatural movement seems to be the big thing, these days, and if you think about it, why not? The movement at the green and surrounds on these modern courses makes every player think, even the elite ones hitting 7-iron from the 205 black tees at this hole. Is not making them think not a bad thing?
4. Now we are on the 4th, and confronted by the most non-linksy feature of the course, an inland tidal burn running down the non-ocean side of the hole (the right, as we are heading south). It dominates your thinking on the tee, and even great thinkers such as Bryan I. can overthink and yank it left towards the seaside dunes....
. I managed to drive the ball straight and reasonably long (for a 67-year old geezer) and had a 5-iron to the green. My partners (alll solid 10-15 HCP players) all did something wrong either off the tee or on their 2nd or 3rd shots and it seemed ages before I was allowed to semi-shank my 2nd into the RH greenside bunker. My compadres grumbled about the phalanx of LH 2nd shot fairway bunkers, but they were eminently carryable and if you hit it left (as I had failingly tried to do) the contours would have brought their balls to the green. I hit an amazing bunker shot from a down hill lie to 5 feet, but yipped the birdie putt and walked smilingly shocked
to the next green.... Overall, too many bunkers, but still a 3*** hole.
Rich