It ought to be possible for a course to have say 3 or 4 overall total yardages with each hole having 3 or 4 different tee pad positions but no specific colour of tee marker assigned to each specific tee pad.
This way by simply moving the different coloured tee blocks between the different tee pads you could mix the colour of tee to a different tee pad on pretty much a daily basis with different levels of challenge per hole each day.
Thus on say a Mon the specific tee marker colours could be in 18 very different positions to where they could be on a Tues or a Wed etc etc, ie some days say the ‘yellow’ could be on the front pad of the 1st hole one day but on the middle-back pad the next day etc.
Just move the different coloured markers onto the different tee pads on a regular basis.
With say 3 or 4 different tee pads and 3 or 4 different colours of marker you’d effectively have something like 54 or 72 different length/challenge holes available for play.
I hope my words have explained this the way I’d like them too!
Thomas:
I have recounted here before that when I first went to Carnoustie, the tees were orange, green and yellow. Each of them used six regular tees, six forward tees, and six of the Open Championship tees. So, the day I first played it, I played #16 from 248 yards, then on #17 we were forward and could actually carry the far crossing of the burn, and then #18 we played from the normal men's tee.
It was very cool, and since there were no long carries over waist-high grass, you could play a few holes from the Open tees and actually finish them. You didn't expect to make par on those holes, but if you did it was a real thrill !
That's a great solution for a normal, 6800-yard course. For the 6100-yard course I'm planning now, I don't think we have to move things around very much. A couple of the long par-4's might play like par-5's for most guys, but that just means there are two holes that play like par-5's total, because there aren't any real par-5's on the course. One of the par-3's might be better played short of the green, like the 16th at Carnoustie -- but again, what's wrong with that? Par might be 68, but the target score for most guys would still be around what they shoot on a regular par-71 or 72 course.