Lots of ways to look at this.
and Paul's utopia is a good one, but it's not always that simple.
We(here) all love firm and fast when conditions allow.
Those conditions aren't always obtainable for a variety of reasons.
It's no small coincidence that the courses here that produce it have the BIGGEST budgets allowing for frequent topdressing, aerifying, dethatching, and extremely sophisticated irrigation systems.
The utopia Paul seeks does exist, at certain times on very low end courses, though most low end courses find watering cheaper than regrassing/reseeding later.
A major problem in the northeast US is when it's the hottest, is when people play the most golf so traffic is heaviest when the grass is the most susceptible.
Throw in carts (when are people MOST likely to take them?-when it's hot).
Traffic on dormant grass (which is a great surface to play on) can quickly make it dead grass.
Turning off the water on bermuda (Pinehurst) is a lot different than turning off the water on bent, esp at 95 degrees and 90% humidity.
The difficulty is if a course is willing to lose a bit of grass for better overall playing surface, will the PAYING crowd accept it.
I know at my beloved Goat they apologize for the dusty conditions and people are happiest when a bit of rain gets the crabgrass running, which absolutely takes the enjoyment out for me when it's high in front of the greens
.
But perhaps my enjoyment is aided by the fact that the course is emptiest when it's driest and dustiest
(great for me--not real good for business.....)
No question that the public needs educating, but those who do the educating by example may lose more customers than they gain.
Which is perfect IF you survive.
That's part of the whole knucklehead problem of Grow the game-the game can only grow properly at a certain pace and when that pace accelerates artificially (Tiger/golf is cool/big holes), knuckleheads slip through the cracks and we're stuck with them, and worse yet many places are catering to them for survival.
I do know one late October I hosted a GCAer who commented our course not playing firm enough and being too green.
At that point we had not run the anywhere water since early September due to fall rains and cooler air and soil temperatures. Mother nature is going to dictate until we put up domes. (or sub air
)
and to your point Paul, we need to vote with our feet and educate and encourage others to do the same.
Seems to me when one chooses Trump over Murcar, they're NOT voting with their feet, and more importantly missing out on a gem.