Neil
There’s no doubt that the area in front of the near bunker appears to be a sandy colour but that was my point about the photo/postcard being tinted in slightly unnatural colours. The colours certainly don’t look 100% realistic to me.
Having grown up on a clay soil course, and back when we had proper summers
, I can confirm that hard baked clay can go a very light colour when bone dry. It’s also easy to imagine that that area might be a high footfall area particularly if the next tee was up to the right, which would readily account for the bare patches.
With regards to the banking at the back, I’m not suggesting that it was created as such. As we know, MacK was very adept at using mounds/banks as back drops for holes (eg. Pitreavie) but in using them he we would need to bench the green in to some extent and rework the contours of the bank. We also know he used back bunkers on his courses, at least in his early work (eg. Alwoodley) so that’s why I’m thinking that the bank behind the green has been extensively reworked to create rear bunkers and in doing so a heap of sand would have been used.
That said, I’m still of the view that it’s not in the UK for the reasons others have previously stated.
Niall