The course played very long for the HHH -- as in 30 miles long, according to Matt Ginella's tracker. We got in 108 holes and had an hour of sunlight to spare. Perfect weather for a Hike - overcast and cool in the morning, sunny and 76 after lunch.
What did I learn? It's tough, even from the middle tees. You've got to drive the ball straight because the native at the edges is nasty stuff. [I had a poor day with the driver, Jim had an up and down day, Ashley Mayo rarely hit it anywhere but 220 down the middle.] We made very few birdies. The turf is thin but the course plays very firm, drives run out a long way and approaches must be played to the front edge of the green, not flown to the pin.
The feedback from everybody who goes out there is that they can't believe how different the two courses are, to the point that it's difficult to even think about how a particular hole plays in reverse. It's very hard for people to remember the holes when there are 36 of them [and especially if you keep playing them back and forth]. Like many links courses, it's often non-descript from the tee, because the undulations in the fairway and the bunkering is smaller scale than most modern courses, but there is a lot of cool stuff once you get out in the fairway and get a good look.
Forest Dunes is playing their member-guest the next two days over The Loop, once each way and then Sunday on the Weiskopf course. The Loop then opens for limited play on Monday.
P.S. Best news of the day: we raised about $20,000 for Midnight Golf.