I was thinking about this question while reading some of the comments about today’s match at Silloth, where the winds are forecast to be gusting at 45mph. I’ve had great fun at a lot of courses (Swinley, Prestwick and North Berwick would be high on the lost) but the rounds that come immediately to mind are those i’ve played on links in winds that would have been considered to be virtually unplayable by some.
Deal a couple of years ago in a 30-40mph cross-wind from the sea, with almost no-one else on the course, was an absolute blast. I can still remember really clearly a round on the New Course in a student competition nearly 30 years ago. A guy from Stirling and I were playing with a young scratch golfer from Japan on his first trip outside of the country. It was so windy that we couldn’t use tees on several holes, and I can even now picture his bag blowing off the 9th tee. We spent the round telling him that it was always like this in the UK and we didn’t know what he was worried about. By the end of the round i think he was enjoying it almost as much as we were.
And then only a couple of weeks ago, a round on the Eden with winds that it was difficult to stand up in. Lots of people walking off the course or not even bothering starting, nowhere on the 4th green where a ball would stop, but I loved it. Driver, 3 wood, 5 iron into a 420 yard hole going out but driving the 18th green to 2 feet and holing my last putt of 2018 for a second eagle of the round (not sure I’ve ever done that before in nearly 40 years of playing). Not the greatest course by any means but for sheer fun in those conditions (except for the horrible holes round the pond) it did it for me.
I’m sure many would see this as having an element of masochism in it - and on a thick rough/tree-lined course I’d be inclined to agree. But on a links course created and set up with those conditions in mind, the creativity and variety of shots required is at a different level. So I’m sitting at home today very jealous of the guys up at Silloth. Wish I was there!