Sometimes after I've read a very good thread or about a great golf course or a terrific insight by one of the architects here my mind will turn to some obscure Ontario course I've played and almost unconsciously I'll remember it through this new lens - and it strikes me how remarkable is the number of remarkable golf holes I've played that, remarkably, no one has ever remarked on. It's striking what the game and its fields of play will reveal to you if you have your eyes open and, more importantly, if you're willing to see. And it's striking how (even just discussing) the great fields of play can actually help make you more able and willing to see.
P
The 'bad' courses, for me (even if others praise them) -- they're the ones that don't ask or help you to see in this way: they've given you so much to 'look at' and all of it is so obvious that you're as inert and unengaged as a shell shocked bystander -- overstimulating courses for the already overstimulated.