Postulating that all courses should be walkable is like postulating that all nutrition must be consumed using a fork.
Asserting that you should be able to walk from the clubhouse to the course just eliminated Sand Hills and Bandon Dunes...two very special places.
It's a big world. Beautiful and wonderful things abound.
Chris
You are missing the point. Ideally, should the house not be near the 18th green? Does anybody want the house a long walk from the course? Does anybody ideally think there should be long walks between holes? I think compromises are made which creates long walks on courses and to the house. Sometimes courses are good enough to overcome the compromises; sometimes not.
Ciao
Hi Sean,
I vote for the best 18 holes possible, always and with no exception. In many cases, it is a miracle if the best 18 holes happen to be within a tight routing yet we are accustomed to this paradigm. A course on 150-200 acres, in itself, probably demanded numerous compromises simply to make a routing work. If you were on 3,000 acres, and had a wonderful site for the clubhouse and a world class site for a course, would it make sense to sacrifice either for the mere sake of walking from the clubhouse to the course? All you have to do is drive (or catch a shuttle) to the golf course and go have fun, and I think that is well worth it if the reward is great.
Long transitions aren't my favorite either, but I would prefer a little longer walk to a better hole over a walk off to a not very good hole 100% of the time. I suppose it depends on how long the transition really is...I don't think I'd want to walk a mile between holes no matter how good the next one may be but I'd happily walk an extra 50-100 yards for something special. Each hole has a beginning and an end, and I'd prefer what's between the two be as exhilarating and fun as is possible. I'm far less concerned with what is between the holes.
CJ
Chris
I get where you are coming from, However, shouldn't any archie worth his salt be good enough to create holes where none exist - for the sake of making a tight routing? I can understand if an absolute stunner has to be kicked to the side for the sake of a one bad walk, but I wonder if that is often the case - pretty is my bet. I guess I fall on the side of make the routing tight and get the archie to make up the difference - otherwise his salary is cut
Sweet Lou
You got the wrong guy. I am not overly keen on jacket & tie club lunches. I do them when necessary, but I am happier sticking with a club sandwich and a decent pint.
Ciao
Sean,
Great points! I would think creation of great holes within tight routings is certainly doable with an unlimited budget and no restrictions, yet I think you will likely have to "fit someting in" the routing due to a host of challenges. I may be wrong here, but it seems the overwhelming number of newer courses aren't on what we would agree to be tight routings on tightish sites. Interesting that that could well help define a classic course, regardless of age!
While not speaking to anyone in particular, the only point I have tried to make is it is a big world, and variety can be a good thing. We all have an opportunity to play what we like, and not play what we may not. If anyone turns down an invite to experience Sand Hills simply because you ride to or on the course, well that's ok, but you will miss one of the great places in golf. One person may prize walkability over all else - nothing wrong with that. Others may prefer a wonderful view - nothing wrong with that. Still others may want the best 18 holes possible - what's not to like about that! Finding all three (and probably more) at one place is rare indeed. Hence, the benefit of a big world!
A very wise man once told me you can find the "connector" hole in most every tight (or not) routing if you know what to look for...a hole that really doesn't fit but was needed to get to the next place, maybe even to a stellar finish at the clubhouse. I often wonder, how many good courses would be great without any constraint (site, budget, terrain, etc.) at all. Imperfection is beauty in golf.
I'm not a qualified architect and claim no learned expertise, but it also seems if you begin with a first tee and an 18th green site (at or not at a clubhouse) you have begun the journey
already constrained. To build something great with constraints is a mastery of art that few have really achieved. That's why we can pick nits here.
It may be a novel thought, but I really want the best 18 holes. If I have to walk a bit farther for it, I'm in. If I have to ride to it, I'm in. If I have to ride on it, I'm in. If I have to walk a bit between holes to have it, i'm in. Then again, that's just me
It's also ok not to particularly like something, but one may miss something special with hardened notions.
I don't want to eat a milkshake with a fork. In the rare cases my wife allows me to have one (or if I sneak one), I'd prefer a straw or maybe a spoon. I certainly don't want to forego milkshakes altogether because of being wedded to a fork.
CJ