I spent the entire month of July in Florida and I played some rounds in the humidity. I played a few Gordon Lewis designed Golf Courses; Heron's Glen GC, Colonial CC and Sarasota National GC. I had never heard of Gordon Lewis, but it seems that he has designed many courses in Florida. After playing the first two courses I wondered about how the architect designed the holes from basically swampland. And, if you had to dredge up the material on which to build the holes why not build it with a bit more width? Both Heron's Glen and Colonial CC were somewhat penal in that even a well struck shot slightly offline was in the swamp or in someone's back yard. I cursed him on many occasions, almost as if he hit the shot! At Lewis' Sarasota National (Venice, FL) there was a lot more room on every hole and it seems that he had a different type of course in mind (for the most part, some holes were exactly the same as if he used a template of sorts) as compared to Colonial CC (Fort Myers, FL) and Heron's Glen GC (N. Fort Myers, FL) . Could it be that Lewis designed what WCI (community developer)wanted or he designed what they allowed him to design within certain (swamp)land constraints? Honestly, apart from a few nice biarritz greens and a few decent holes, I wasn't enamored with his work, although the bunkering was decent in some spots I thought and the front of the greens were always open to run the ball up. Is there a law that prohibits how much you can dredge in swapland when laying out your holes? Is swampland the same as wetlands? Just out of curiosity, what is Lewis' background?