Art and architecture are different. If I get to 17 expecting to see a perfectly framed berm hole and come away subliminally disjointed I may go away disliking the course without even knowing why.
I get this.
Several people have told me they were "disappointed" in seeing Cape Kidnappers in person, because all they'd seen of it were aerial photos, and they didn't get the same perspective from the ground. I don't know how to respond to that. Expectations are a bitch. But Cape Kidnappers is a spectacular place even without a drone.
I think this may be the most important message on here.
With all the drone photography out there , giving a visual perspective that one cannot achieve when playing can indeed create an expectation that cannot be attained.
Drones have taken golf course photography to a whole different level, and the views achievable from 'up there' are simply so stunning.
The entirety of the landscape that can be viewed is spectacular but does create a image that one cannot attain on the course, and as such places like Cape Kidnappers risk that 'disppointment"label.
I think this is when one has to appreciate the architecture at landlevel and understand what the architect intended the PLAYER to see and play rather than what the drone presents.
Most of us on here will get that, the thrill seekers will not.