Nicolas
I’m with Matt, there should be more fat, ugly women on your webpage. And while you’ve ticked the Asian and black boxes, where’s the gingers ? You need to get a red head in there somewhere. Why not nick the image of Merideth from Disney’s “Brave” but lose the bow and arrows, put in a golf club and stick a few warts on her face ? That would be that sorted.
Anyway, having dealt with the serious issues let’s turn to the more trivial golf course design matters. And by golf course design I mean exactly that. I’ll refrain from commenting on club culture etc which I suspect is more of an issue for prospective members, be they men or women.
Firstly, I’m not sure about the idea of defined criteria for a women friendly golf course or even the idea of accreditation for such. To my mind that could lead to a paint by numbers approach without any real thought or analysis of individual situations that would bring a more bespoke solution, if indeed a solution was required. I’m also conscious that while you’re focusing on women, you could equally be considering weaker golfers in general be they men, women, boys or girls.
As for creating new forward tees in order to make the course a set length, how is that going to work in different conditions such as when the ground is wet and soft and the ball basically stops where it lands ? Also, what about the walk from green to the next tee. Is there any point in shortening the course when all you do is lengthen the walk between holes by a corresponding amount ?
What I think is far more important is the nature of the golf. Moving a tee forward might avoid a forced carry tee shot in which case that would definitely help the weaker golfer. However I wouldn’t remove hazards altogether, after all, even weaker golfers want some interest. What’s important is the nature of the hazard. For instance, flanking bunkers that perhaps edge into the fairway but that have enough room for the player to go round them would do that.
Basically, take what you’re advocating for greens ie. being able to roll the ball on, and follow that principle all the way through from tee to green. That’s more or less what MacKenzie was advocating 100 years ago and what many classic courses in this country (Scotland) still have.
Niall