Jim:
FL gets plenty of exposure because of snow bird visits and likely until recent times the virtue of that exposure meant rating gains.
That will not likely continue as other areas of the country make greater strides.
Just to give two quick examples -- there's nothing in FL that can touch the likes of a Ballyneal and Rock Creek, in my mind. As sites are used which possess superior land the nature of such layouts and the routings they use will only cause more reshuffling of the deck.
Jim, from my experienced / travels -- the desire to build something substanial has always been a goal for many -- few have done so. The courses I just mentioned above -- plus the likes of Kingsley and Black Mesa, to name just two, are clearly pushing aside those layouts which possess pedestrian land sites and often times redundant routings which is the hallmark of so much of FL golf.
Matt,
Lots of states can't match Ballyneal or Rock Creek for top courses (although I'm not sure I'd want to be condemned to playing all the courses in Colorado or Montana).
The thread title is why you CAN'T STAND Florida golf. (and you are of course entitled to your opinion)
I drove by Black Mesa on my way back Taos last week-it didn't look very playable, but I suppose with snoeshoes and a good labrador retriever it would be doable.
Three of the four four courses you list are located in dramatic terrain but are unplayable in the winter,which is the point of Central and south Florida golf in many/most cases.
Face it, most courses suck by your enviable high standards, you just don't bother to play them when in Georgia, Arkansas, Tennessee,Kentucky, Virginia, alabama etc.
The reality is most development courses suck and that was the formula in Florida for years.
I've never found bermuda to be any softer than bent grass, perhaps the fact that most of your bermuda r golf has been played IN THE WINTER when conditions tend to be soft everywhere (particularly if they overseed). Plenty of northeast courses are soft in the heat of the summer and in the fall as the daylight wanes. (they also happen to be closed in the winter)
I'd be surprised if many of the teriffic new courses out west (or in Florida) are even open in 10 years.