Inspired by this thread.
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,59431.0.htmlIn recent years Rye and The Valley Portrush have added irrigation with the promise to members that they will be used sparingly. That leaves very few courses that rely on rain for their irrigation. We should remember rainwater is (ceteris paribus) the Finest water for turf and secondly it means that the course will play differently form week to week and year to year.
Whilst I hope that everyone has had the experience of playing a firm and fast running links, as the other thread points out, it doesn’t get any better than when it’s an entirely natural occurrence. Today it seems that its mostly the ‘second’ courses that remain unirrigated and I thought I would like to highlight this as a connoisseur experience for the die hard golf fan. This is potentially downsizing at its best.
(One has to admit that in a dry summer the course will get a little ‘rustic’.)
Here’s three that I believe qualify, all offer good golf and plenty of “joy to be alive” factor.
1
The Jubilee (9/12/18 whatever) at Rye.
2
Old Tom Morris Course, Rossapenna
3
Dawlish Warren GC. South Devon.
This is not in the Pepper book but as I’ve said before that’s an omission. Played this a few years ago at Easter and it was the ‘purest’ experience I’ve enjoyed on a golf course. It is laid out over a spit of linksland with water on 3 sides and the turf that day was ‘crunchy’. I’m not long, but an 8i followed by a 9i saw me at the back of the green on a 350 yard hole. It’s short, so a Driver in those conditions is probably foolhardy.
(I think a course will still qualify with automatically irrigated greens.)
Where else?
Do others think these courses can offer the purest conditions?