I could recite Golf Has Never Failed Me in my sleep
but that is besides the point. I am not AT ALL an advocate of building ponds and or water hazards and I very clearly understand that Ross like most other Golden Age designers only incorporated water in their designs if it was already present on the site and even then usually only a few times during the round. Having said that, there are hundreds a great water hazards out there that are not just oceans. Some are streams, or ditches or wetlands or ponds or lakes,…the list goes on. ALL of these courses listed below have some kind of water features where balls could be lost but they add to the greatness and diversity of the golf course. If they didn't, the architects would probably have avoided and/or eliminated them if they could.
Pine Valley, Shinnecock Hills, Winged Foot, Baltusrol, The Country Club, Muirfield Village, Oakmont, TPC Sawgrass, The Old Course at St. Andrews, Carnoustie, Augusta National, Bethpage Black, Colonial, Somerset Hills, Plainfield, Lehigh, East Lake, Sebonack, Streamsong, Merion, Firestone, Cascades, The Golf Club, Salem CC, Oakland Hills, Oak Hill, Interlachen, Congressional, Cherry Hills, Baltimore, Scioto, Philadelphia Cricket Club, Lancaster, Olympia Fields, ….
These are just some I have seen that come to mind but I could go on and on! Notice I threw in several Ross courses just for you
Mark