Jack,
I have a variety of photos that document the building of Pacific Dunes, Old Macdonald and recently the Punchbowl putting green at the Bandon Dunes Resort.
I always enjoyed taking before and after photos and telling the story that goes along with the design and building of almost every golf course I have been involved with. Using a mixture of still photos and videos that are taken during the process, they include images of Sebonack and every hole at Ballyneal before an ounce of dirt was ever moved. It wouldn’t take long to match the before photos with the current images. I wanted to capture the moment and then see if the hole turned out the way I may have visualized it, with so many revisions it is always fun to see the final rendition, it makes for an interesting discussion at dinner.
Posting the pictures on GCA is difficult because of the size of the images. When I have given slide shows it is usually presented on a large screen that needs very tight images so it would be hard to down load them all and I am usually explaining and backtracking during the presentation. Maybe some day I will do a DVD/ Book
I have given the presentation to many groups at the Bandon Dunes Resort; one of the most enjoyable was the Macdonald Cup. It was a hit with the attendees, some of them who have never seen the original Redan at North Berwick or The Eden at St. Andrews. In my presentation images are flashed on the screen of Old Macdonald before we started with the construction, looking at a hole in its raw state is a real eye opener. I show the “ideal hole” we used for inspiration and then show various stages of the construction including clearing, shaping, the finish work, drop seeding and hydro mulching. One image shows a panoramic pre-construction view looking south west from the 15th tee at Old Macdonald, followed up by photos taken during the construction process and then finally a beautiful morning picture showing the same view one year later. I follow up with some photos of the grow-in and finally the hole with grass and the flagpole sitting on the green. The work that Ken Nice and the grow-in staff did at Old Macdonald was first class, included are several photos of those guys in action; they were the key to the golf courses success.
I have also done extensive photo work at Pasatiempo, The Valley Club and many of the restoration projects I have been involved with. Brian Chapin, the Superintendent at the Paramount Club, has time-lapse footage of a par 3 green that was totally transformed in front of your eyes. It is a week’s worth of imagery condensed to 7 minutes. He set up a ladder about 75 yards in front of the green and put the camera 20 feet into the air and took photos every minute, fun to watch.
Information is there it is just hard to put it on this website and as Mike Young alluded to, some just wont get it.