On another thread, Sean Arble compares the style of two heathland courses thus:
If you want rugged, proper heathland golf (yet still refined), Walton Heath is the place. If you want a genteel parkland course pretending to be a heathland course, St Georges Hill is the place. Both are of exceptional quality.
Ciao
This reminded me of a similar discussion last year along the lines of: Ganton is the rugged, northern, hardworking championship course, whilst Alwoodley is the more refined, southern, members course. (Or something like that).
The distinction between lowland heath and upland Heath is a botanical one I believe, but starts to create a distinction between two types of heathland course. As I think of the heathland courses I've played, most fit into either the "rugged" or "genteel" category and I'm starting to think I prefer categorisation based more on the spirit of the place, rather than its strict botany?
Do people agree that such a distinction between two types exist!
Is there another sub category of heathland I've missed?
If such a distinction exists, which is your favourite?
Lastly, thinking of another very distinct type of course (parkland, outside of its strict sense, is used so widely as a term that it's tricky to categorise) what about links courses? They can all be pretty rugged when the weather turns, but I think such a difference as heathland courses have is less obvious? Or is it?
Cheers,
James