News:

Welcome to the Golf Club Atlas Discussion Group!

Each user is approved by the Golf Club Atlas editorial staff. For any new inquiries, please contact us.


DMoriarty

  • Karma: +0/-0
Jim,

Thanks very much for chiming in. You've perfectly described the sort of course I see as possibly being the next big innovation in golf course design, although we might disagree on whether it necessarily would be positive innovation.

I hope you don't mind if I try to address some of your specific comments later.

____________________________________________________________

JTigerman,

Thanks for answering the question.  Part of what I am struggling with is whether or not it is merely my deference to tradition that is shaping my opinion on this matter, or whether there are other more tangible benefits of routing so as to make ends meet.  I think that there are, but I'm not sure I could fully articulate all of them.  Sometimes it is a little difficult to totally understand the ramifications (good and bad) of moving away from a traditional approach until long after.  
_________________________________

Tim,

You've touched on an important component that makes all of this possible. The golf cart.  Without a golf cart it is easy to see why they returned to where they started.  

Ironically, though, I have to admit that the base camp concept could potentially make walking much easier than it otherwise would be on the same site, provided that transportation to and from was provided at the end.  But the more likely scenario is that the golfers would be given carts at the beginning and they deadhead back at the end.

I have joked about chair lifts on such courses a number of times, but in some ways a chair lift might be a good solution.  At least it wouldn't put butts in carts prior to the round.
Golf history can be quite interesting if you just let your favorite legends go and allow the truth to take you where it will.
--Tom MacWood (1958-2012)

Tim_Weiman

  • Karma: +0/-0
David M:

I have played a base camp course, only the golf cart had nothing to do with it. Instead, it was a fine old Chris Craft boat at Coeur d'Alene.

Not a great course, but pretty cool for corporate entertainment.
Tim Weiman

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +3/-1
Tom is right he did use the remote start at Wilderness Valley long before we met but it started and ended in the same place, Base Camp golf was based on starting at one location and ending in another.

Jim:  Thanks for chiming in.  But, you remember Black Forest wrong.  The first tee is about 300 yards from the parking lot, and the first two holes are up on top of the ridge ... then you go down to the 3rd tee, and the 18th green finishes up down there.  Even if we'd had the land to play back to the clubhouse, which we didn't, I couldn't imagine breaking up the golf course with a very long, uphill cart ride a couple of holes from the end, so we ended in the valley instead. 

I figured if they ever had a tournament, it was walkable as it is, and they could put a scoreboard by #18 and then shuttle people back to the clubhouse.

William_G

  • Karma: +0/-0
no doubt the 18th at CPC is all about getting back to a great clubhouse

Base Camp golf could be like helicopter skiing LOL
It's all about the golf!

DMoriarty

  • Karma: +0/-0
Golf history can be quite interesting if you just let your favorite legends go and allow the truth to take you where it will.
--Tom MacWood (1958-2012)

Chris Johnston

  • Karma: +0/-0
no doubt the 18th at CPC is all about getting back to a great clubhouse

Base Camp golf could be like helicopter skiing LOL

Why not hell-golf?

Legends Golf Course, South Africa.

http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=video&cd=5&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CEkQtwIwBA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D4buQApSU1t0&ei=5s84U9emKcjgyQHU_oD4Bg&usg=AFQjCNEj4XqQHQ1ilY5pRUBZecg_TiS-rA&bvm=bv.63808443,d.aWc

See David, it really is a big world.  ;)

And, I meant that sincerely.

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +3/-1
Why not hell-golf?


Last month in New Zealand I just happened to be in Queenstown for the debut of "Over The Top" golf, where they've built a par-3 hole up on the mountain above Lake Wakatipu.  The prime minister hit the first few shots, on the Saturday of the New Zealand Open.  Sadly, I can't find anywhere near as good a picture as I've got on my camera, but it was SPECTACULAR up there.

Stephen Davis

  • Karma: +0/-0
I don't post a lot here, but I have spent half of my day catching up on this thread and there has been much that I have learned, but the one thing that has become abundantly clear is...

David Moriarty is an a$$.

Also, yes I have played DRR and I loved it and no I am not a member there ;)

Sam Morrow

I don't post a lot here, but I have spent half of my day catching up on this thread and there has been much that I have learned, but the one thing that has become abundantly clear is...

David Moriarty is an a$$.

Also, yes I have played DRR and I loved it and no I am not a member there ;)

That's saying a lot seeing as you're one of the nicest people I think I've met from this site.

Tim_Weiman

  • Karma: +0/-0
I don't post a lot here, but I have spent half of my day catching up on this thread and there has been much that I have learned, but the one thing that has become abundantly clear is...

David Moriarty is an a$$.

Also, yes I have played DRR and I loved it and no I am not a member there ;)

That's saying a lot seeing as you're one of the nicest people I think I've met from this site.

Sam,

I have not met Stephen and am quite happy to accept your comment that he is one of the nicest people on the site.

However, I don't think his comment about David is appropriate. We are here to discuss golf architecture, not to make personal attacks.

We are all a little bit guilty and all need to clean that up, IMO.
Tim Weiman

Sam Morrow

I don't post a lot here, but I have spent half of my day catching up on this thread and there has been much that I have learned, but the one thing that has become abundantly clear is...

David Moriarty is an a$$.

Also, yes I have played DRR and I loved it and no I am not a member there ;)

That's saying a lot seeing as you're one of the nicest people I think I've met from this site.

Sam,

I have not met Stephen and am quite happy to accept your comment that he is one of the nicest people on the site.

However, I don't think his comment about David is appropriate. We are here to discuss golf architecture, not to make personal attacks.

We are all a little bit guilty and all need to clean that up, IMO.

I agree but it seems like certain names pop in the middle of every petty argument on this site, discussion is good, petty in fighting and false accusations are counter productive. The way a good person like Chris Johnston has been dragged through the mud is an embarrassment to this site.

Stephen Davis

  • Karma: +0/-0
I don't post a lot here, but I have spent half of my day catching up on this thread and there has been much that I have learned, but the one thing that has become abundantly clear is...

David Moriarty is an a$$.

Also, yes I have played DRR and I loved it and no I am not a member there ;)

That's saying a lot seeing as you're one of the nicest people I think I've met from this site.

Sam,

I have not met Stephen and am quite happy to accept your comment that he is one of the nicest people on the site.

However, I don't think his comment about David is appropriate. We are here to discuss golf architecture, not to make personal attacks.

We are all a little bit guilty and all need to clean that up, IMO.

I agree but it seems like certain names pop in the middle of every petty argument on this site, discussion is good, petty in fighting and false accusations are counter productive. The way a good person like Chris Johnston has been dragged through the mud is an embarrassment to this site.
Sam and Tim,
I agree with both of your latest posts. I apologize for dropping the level of discourse here.

Stephen

Tim_Weiman

  • Karma: +0/-0
Sam,

We probably all need to clean up our act a bit. Way too many personal comments in this thread.

Ran provides a great forum and we should respect that, IMO.


Stephen,

Thanks. No worries.
Tim Weiman

Jim Colton

I'm not sure if this adds or detracts to the thread, but here are my thoughts on DR Red immediately after playing in last September:

It is a really unique piece of property and I can't think of another course that I've played that is anything quite like it.

  My favorite holes were on the other side of the road -- I can tell why Tom fought hard to cross that road! My favorite stretch is 13-15, with #14 probably being my favorite hole on the property. I liked how 14 & 15 had bold classic design features on a bold modern course. 14 is just really cool in that there were two ways to achieve a non-blind shot into that green -- hit it long left or hit it straight. Fail and you have a blind shot or are hitting out of the native. #15 proved to be a crucial hole in one of our matches -- our group hit 8 balls off the tee; only my partner and I found our original drives. We squared the match there then halved the remaining 3 holes to advance. I can see how it's a pretty vexing hole but I had success just banging a shot way left each round (I played each side 3 times) and hitting a shot up the length of the green.

  I found the back 10 holes to be such a thrill to play that it overshadowed the front 8 a bit in my mind. I found myself wishing there was a whole 18 over on that side. I don't think that is a criticism of the opening 8 as much as it speaks volumes to that closing stretch. I'm a sucker for the amorphous blended turf and the front nine is really neat with all of the different options around the greens and possible teeing areas (I'm not sure if they are going to go the BN-route with no tee markers, but I think they definitely should). #4 is probably my favorite hole on that side with two distinct paths to the hole - conservative or aggressive, but requiring the longer hitter to hit a straight ball through the neck if he really wants to get it on or close to the green.

 Some other random observations:

 - I saw some really good shots hit on #5 (none by me), most of which got hung up on the bank above the green. I'm not sure if that was the intent or if it's just a maintenance issue, but it did seem like the play there is to hit a left-to-right shot hugging the left side of the green, then roll it off that large slope.

- Speaking of left-to-right, there seemed to be more of that here, in contrast to Ballyneal which seems to have more right-to-left shots. It is probably better suited for my game, assuming I had any control of my golf ball.

- It's probably a function of the early maintenance and/or the weather, but the native rough was brutally difficult. I think I found 3 golf balls for every one that I lost, a surprising number given how new the course is. The last day was pretty tough scoring conditions in general -- hopefully it didn't turned anybody off as too tough. The 18th in particularly was very gnarly -- any thoughts on paring that rough back around and above the bunkers left and short of the green?

- I really liked the 12th tee from the left. It appeared that the fairway ridge in the foreground mimicked the large hills in the background. There were some awesome skyline views on the back ten with the impressive mountain of sand serving as the background. Getting down to 16 green is really neat because you fully realize how big those dunes are and how small we are by comparison.

- It's probably no surprise that I tended to prefer the greens with bolder internal contours like #14 to some of the more subtle ones, but there seems to be a good mix of green sites. I saw more than a few putts played 1-2 feet one direction that broke the opposite direction. The subtle greens with more a constant tilt with mild humps and bumps were difficult to read. #18 seemed to have a lot of dips and a small hollows -- not sure if that was a early grow-in thing?

- We played the 496 tee on #13, where you had no choice but to hit atop the hill left of the corner. It is a really cool looking approach shot from up there. I would've like to have seen a more generous landing area up there to help the safe play.

- I found the walk to be very reasonable and manageable. The blended turf probably makes some of the green-to-tee walks seem longer than they actually are, but it's not bad at all if you know where to put your golf bag. Climbing #17 is the only arduous walk on the course.

This was before the DR Red vs Ballyneal boxing match. I did not participate because I don't tend to do hole by hole matches, nor would anyone take my opinion as anything more than biased drivel. But for what little it's worth, I rather group the holes into par 5's, par 3's and short and long par 4's. First of all, I don't think the par 5's are a strength for DR red and would go as far as to say that there isn't one there that I would trade for any of the par 5's at Ballyneal. Call it 10-9 or even 10-8. The short par 4's are a strength at Ballyneal - I think most courses would be 10-9 to it. par 3's are a push and long par 4's are really strong on both courses and could go either direction.

I did play the first 7-8 holes on the White course and the par 3's on the back, and carted the rest as that was all I had time for. It does seem extremely different than the Red course. I can't put my finger on it or explain it very well, other than the Doak course seems so seamlessly connected to the land, whereas the Nicklaus course seems drawn upon it. It's definitely beautiful landscape and I can see how others can enjoy it even if it doesn't quite fit my golf DNA. I'm not sure what holes are people's favorites on the White course but the 17th looked strong in my opinion.

It has been touched on in this thread, and I'm sorry if this is going to ruffle feathers, but in the spirit of frankness and honesty, if we are going to credit Doak for carefully getting it right out of the gates, what does that say about the original original Nicklaus course he gave to the first owners? There may be dozens of potential all world golf courses waiting to be built in the Sand hills regions, but the truth is only a half dozen or so will ever get built. I just wish there was more careful consideration with what went into the ground, as these special opportunities only come so often. While it's true that all of the improvements that have been made have been for the better, my basic premise is that the architect's job is to get as many of these things right as possible upfront. Future changes cost money and more importantly you are limited to what you can do based on some of the original decisions. Erin Hills went through the same thing. I just think an architect has to recognize these issues while it's in the dirt and adjust accordingly. It should be part of the job description.

Anyways, that has always been my mental block with original Dismal River course. I recognize that it's a mental block that likely prevents me fully appreciating what is there now, just like I have a mental block against Erin Hills being considered a great course (though I predict the 2017 US open will be a smash success). That is honestly where I stand on these issues and fully recognize that it's just one mere hobbyist's opinion fully loaded with baggage and barely worth the digibytes it's printed on.

With that, I think it's probably time for me to remove myself from GCA in the hope that it will speed up the path back to more frank and honest discussion. If I ever build a golf course, you are all welcome to come see it and try to rip it to shreds. Thank you to Ran for everything that I've learned over the past 8+ years. I'm sure I will run into many of you in the future, whether at a Hundred Hole Hike event, get together or even a future 5th Major.

 Jim

William_G

  • Karma: +0/-0
well said Jim, sadly
It's all about the golf!

Jim Nugent

  • Karma: +0/-0
Hell, Jim Colton, that was a great post.  The kind we need more of, not less. 

Hope you stick around.   

Chris Johnston

  • Karma: +0/-0
Jim,

My friend, you ruffled no feathers, and I appreciate your candor.  I may not agree with everything you said, but have no problem at all with you expressing it.  That is what is expected of true friends.

It seems several good people are rethinking participating in the current environment on this site, and I can be counted among them.

When civility is lost and you come under withering personal attack, it takes the fun out of it.

I'm reminded these days of  two favored quotes at the moment, both by Edmund Burke.

Realtive to the routing debate..."We must all obey the great law of change. It is the most powerful law of nature, and the means perhaps of its conservation."

And, relative to life in general..."The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."

Jim, I hope you rethink leaving, for if you do so, it will be our loss.


Tim_Weiman

  • Karma: +0/-0
Hell, Jim Colton, that was a great post.  The kind we need more of, not less. 

Hope you stick around.   

Jim,

That was my reaction. Seemed like he put a real effort into the post and was very good for people who haven't been to DR.
Tim Weiman

Adam Lawrence

  • Karma: +0/-0
no doubt the 18th at CPC is all about getting back to a great clubhouse

Base Camp golf could be like helicopter skiing LOL

Why not hell-golf?

Legends Golf Course, South Africa.

http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=video&cd=5&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CEkQtwIwBA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D4buQApSU1t0&ei=5s84U9emKcjgyQHU_oD4Bg&usg=AFQjCNEj4XqQHQ1ilY5pRUBZecg_TiS-rA&bvm=bv.63808443,d.aWc

Not a great example, as the hole in question is not part of the main course at Legends - it's completely separate and you have to pay a separate fee to play it.
Adam Lawrence

Editor, Golf Course Architecture
www.golfcoursearchitecture.net

Principal, Oxford Golf Consulting
www.oxfordgolfconsulting.com

Author, 'More Enduring Than Brass: a biography of Harry Colt' (forthcoming).

Short words are best, and the old words, when short, are the best of all.

Sean_A

  • Karma: +0/-0
Tim, I am not frustrated with you at all. But golf is better when Mike DeVries breaks rules. That was my point.

If Tom Doak doesn't route what he did at DR, there is no DR Red. While that would make some happy, I think DR Red is good for golf for a lot of reasons.
I feel the same way about Kingsley.

But if we follow the formulaic rules preached by some here, these courses are much different, or do not get built.



Don

You have set up a false dichotomy.  I don't think Dr B or either David is advocating that Dismal or any course should not have been built because the routing isn't ideal in relation to the house.  I think its rather a case of if something isn't ideal, be upfront about it instead of couching the imperfection as inconsequential in pursuit of the best 18 holes.  Obviously, many feel their ideal is getting the best 18 holes out of a property.  At least David M is saying where does that philosophy lead us if taken 25%, 50% or even 100% to the extreme?  If walking golf is considered an ideal, then it follows that time spent not engaged with the game is best if limited.  Again, obviously many do not see this premise as an ideal and believe the quality of the holes trumps all else.  I come from the school that says hang on, is this really the case or should it be the case?  If an archie can't build an interesting hole from less than good terrain then its time to hire a new archie.  The exceptions I can envision is when there is only so much money in the pot.  First and foremost there has to be 18 holes.  I don't agree with this approach, but I can fully understand it.  Another exception is making a routing decision which leads to a few longs walks because one or two absolutely stone dead great holes can be included.  In both cases (budget and quality holes) its down to the archie's judgement and at Dismal Doak may have got it spot on.  In fact, I trust he did get it spot on, but it doesn't mean its ideal for me.  I think if Doak can get that spot on, he can figure a way to get back to the house and everybody would think its spot on even if Doak didn't think so.  But thats why the archie gets paid the big bucks - making all those calls. 

Ciao
New plays planned for 2024: Nothing

David_Elvins

  • Karma: +0/-0
I thought this comment from Jim Urbina was a gold nugget.  A pity that his excellent post did not inspire more replies.  I guess there was nothing to argue with. 

For that matter I think some of the most creative holes require a slope of at least 6- 8% uphill to stagger features that are the basis of strategic design, the 13th hole at the Valley Club as one example.   In the Base Camp idea I would have turned a few holes up hill to reduce the repetition.  Wandering aimlessly was never my intent, it was a solution to a dilemma that arose infrequently but never less was a factor in some  of the routings. The biggest problem today with many of the  Golden Age designs is the uphill holes, many of the classics greens had sloping greens that conformed with the natural terrain but at today's greens speeds require that the greens be unnaturally flattened out.  A dilemma in uphill holes.
« Last Edit: March 31, 2014, 05:56:12 AM by David_Elvins »
Ask not what GolfClubAtlas can do for you; ask what you can do for GolfClubAtlas.

Niall C

  • Karma: +0/-0

Take a look at many of the links courses in Scotland, they took off down the coast away from the starting point and at some point someone said S&^%$  we got to get back from whence we came.  Are they good courses because they returned or could they have been better if they continued on?  At Prestwick or Troon, I would have been happy to jump on the train and return back to the car park when I was done., just saying.  It's just about the convenience.


Jim

Interesting you mention those two courses as there is a group of golfers who play an annual match starting at the first at Royal Troon and playing out to the end of the course where they then jump the fence over to Prestwick and play in to Prestwick clubhouse where the have a "refreshing" lunch. Thereafter, those that are still fit play the front half of Prestwick jump the fence and then the back half of Troon.

Also Leven and Lundin Links. How about using the best of both courses, starting at one clubhouse and finishing at the other.

Niall

Rich Goodale

  • Karma: +0/-0
Niall

I was told in the late 70's by a Troon member that there was an annual match that started at Prestwick and did not finish until it ran out of land somewhere in Irvine.

Rich

PS--Vis a vis the topic of this discussion, am I allowed to defer comment until after I have seen and played Dismal in late June?

rfg
Life is good.

Any afterlife is unlikely and/or dodgy.

Jean-Paul Parodi

Chris Johnston

  • Karma: +0/-0

It has been touched on in this thread, and I'm sorry if this is going to ruffle feathers, but in the spirit of frankness and honesty, if we are going to credit Doak for carefully getting it right out of the gates, what does that say about the original original Nicklaus course he gave to the first owners?


Jim,

After "sleeping on" your post, I have an interesting perspective to add to this question that I'd bet most have never thought about.  I call it "Owner Bias".

It is a fact that the original developer, associated with (but not part of) the original owners, told Mr. Nicklaus he wanted an edgy and "Championship" golf course.  It is quite possible that, with those instructions, Jack delivered in spades.  Yet, it was panned early as too difficult by many.   I'm not sure if the original developer was a golfer, or at all interested in architecture at all, and I think that is more common than many may realize.

Enter owner #3 who had a completely different vision, plan, and goal for the club and golf focussed on fun and the experience.  While I often wonder if my values are at all right, many changes to the original course are due to those different values.  Softening some edges and enhancing playability and maintenance makes nothing but sense through my lens as we only hold one Major (the 5th) each year.  The owner influence on what he ultimately wants certainly makes a difference.  Overtime, with input from trusted friends, the White will come nearer to those values. 

On the Red from the start, I had a good idea they kind of course I wanted and, thankfully, engaged Tom Doak to deliver it.   Funny thing, Tom and I didn't have extensive discussions about what was desired, other than my bias towards more "classic" greens.  Any perceived "routing controversy" is completely artificial to me, and likely to Tom, but it does make for good conversation.  We agreed wanted the best 18 holes possible, above all else, and that goal was achieved. 

There are probably hundreds of courses that you and I would would change to meet what we want.  ANGC is a pefect example of evolution to values.  I respect that you joined a club that fit what you wanted, yet I would definitely change some things there if I became the third owner.

The net effect here is we have two wonderful and different courses.  We are lucky.

William_G

  • Karma: +0/-0
CJ,

Regarding the Base Camp or Heli skiing thoughts, from a skiers standpoint, there is always that thought about getting the best run while still being able to get back to the lift/copter without a hike

In fact some of the best terrain for skiing is sometimes Off Piste or Out of Bounds.

So the concept of routing for the best golf holes could be seen similarly to getting the best runs while skiing in a particular area.  8)
It's all about the golf!