Ira - very nice post
Jim - Johnny Miller had what I think was great advice on this, ie try to make the golf course a fun place to be. Maybe that means sometimes riding in a cart, or having kids just hit the putts, or letting them - after playing a few holes - roll around in the bunkers or go off to explore a pond for crayfish. In short, help create for them fun, pleasant memories of being at a *course*, and then hope that over time they start loving the *game*.
Michael - I’m with you. We can sing ‘Always Look on the Bright Side of Life’ together as these fascistic Romans march us off to our doom. (What have the Romans ever done for us anyway?) There’s a Par 3 course near my home; I played it once. My fondness for Tom D and admiration of his talents is very genuine, but the Preserve would have to be, like, a thousand times more fun than my local Par 3 for me to prefer it to ANY regulation course.
(Plus, I have a question: if these Par 3s that Tom and Ben and Gil are building have - and depend on - fun, great, wildly contoured and challenging greens, why not just skip a step and a fad and build wildly contoured and challenging greens all the time, including on mini regulation courses, ie 5 or 6 or 7 holes that include short and long Par 4s, one Par 3 and one Par 5?)
#Par 4s Are The Best Holes In Golf