As you might expect, the course was packed over the weekend. Here are my impressions so far.
Yes, it is a renovation, and yes, traditionalists are not going to like the bunker changes. I concur with Mac. It will be quite a while before we go back to ovals. In fairness, the old bunkers were not completely original. They were much deeper than the originals, particularly on the 3rd green. Zinkand removed the bunker left of the 2nd green that was added in the 70's. You can now see the entire green from bunkers where you couldn't before.
He married several bunkers to the native desert surrounding the hole. You can see that on the picture of the 7th green. The right bunker comprises what used to be 2 bunkers on the right, and the sand extends to the desert. All that desert is in the process of being revegetated. That planting process will take most of the winter (15,000+ plants) so the look is a bit starker now than it will end up.
The greens were much better than I thought they would be at this stage. Seed went down Labor Day weekend and we had a warm fall. The greens accepted shots quite well and putted true. It will take us a year or two for the new greens to settle out, but so far, this is a big improvement over some of the other local courses who did their greens a few years ago. I hope that Estancia has the same success when they redo their greens next summer.
Subtle breaks were the hallmark of the old greens. They are different now, but Zinkand was able to keep that excitement. Our format yesterday was a scramble with 8 members, and a number of the putts required all 8 of us to have a go. Feel free to make cheap jokes...
I may be in the minority, but I also love the dormant grass. The club is starting an agronomy research program, and as a result, we may see dormant grass more often.
So far, so good on the new tee boxes as well. The new back tee is now over 7,200 yards even though three holes (3, 14, 17) were shortened by close to a total of 100 yards. Tees were added in several spots to improve the options for the 6,150 to 6,350 tees.
Over 100 trees were removed. Most that were removed were non-native Chilean mesquites that bordered the grass surfaces. They had been added over time. You can see a lot more now including a number of specimen saguaros that had been hidden. The sight lines to the surrounding mountains is much improved as well. The tree removal was a restoration as there were not a lot of trees surrounding the course originally.