Interesting points Jeff. Amusing too:)
Reviewing the sorts of equipment available in times now well gone by and considering the physical and logistical aspects of its sourcing, transportation, maintenance and use ought to highlight why certain features on courses were built as they were. For example, from studying how steam shovels operated and viewing photos it should be possible to appreciate how bunkering, mounding and green complexes on certain courses are shaped as they are and why some areas are left seemingly untouched. Big time work .... imagine say the process of modern day sand-capping of fairways on clay based terrain but undertaken not with today’s equipment but with sort of equipment available way back then! Nah, maybe not!
Highly labour intensive too what with potentially a couple of hundred men on site and loads of horses. Standards of living and expectations were way different in times gone by so on a big job would the labourers have been mainly sourced and lived locally or would some have maybe been somewhat nomadic and perhaps lived even in tents nearby?
And in relation to the horses, the water and fodder and shoeing and overnight livery requirements. I’ve read a couple of accounts of several horses dying during golf course construction.
And for the machines delivery to site, maintenance and spare parts and if steam powered then sourcing coal/wood and water too. Use of dynamite perhaps? That must have been fun!
Overall quite a complex operation .... and that’s even without having to deal with the likes of irrigation and cabling plus the delights of dealing with committees and club politics! Oh well, I guess permitting was probably not as exacting back then!
Atb