Didn’t Harry Colt say something like “trees should be the scenery not on the stage?
My understanding it that the term ‘parkland’ course originates from the period when golf in the U.K. especially was moving inland and being played in the often ornate and designer planned and laid out gardens of stately homes, big houses and their estates. Such areas were sometimes referred to as the estates ‘park’, hence ‘parkland’.
These estate ‘parklands’ could be very large and were usually grazed by sheep, cattle, goats, horses etc who nibbled away at any vegetation including any self seeding saplings that were inclined to grow. Thus such ‘parks’ were generally not tree covered and what trees there were, which were relatively few, tended to be large specimen trees that had been there for years, maybe decades, as the estate houses ‘parks’ were laid out long before golf came inland.
Atb