More to come later when I spend a little more quality time to get some better shots.
There are so many great things at Hacienda that could truly make it a really good golf course, IF the membership didn't trip over itself 99.9% of the time.
Here is a prime example:
#3, just in front of the green. Beautiful Max Behr au-nautrale' sandy waste-style bunker sitting in front of the green, and then more of the same circling around the green--now all gone. (the footprints are still there) The bunkers you see are all the sum of the original parts, very much evolved looking, but not too much in tune with what's in the ground, meaning that they don't tie-in or together.
This is the tee shot over a pretty pronouced ravine. Understand that at Hacienda, tree planting is another certain killer of this golf course, as so many trees have been planted there in the last 30-35 years, they are finally choking off the course. Most of the members do not and will not ever understand this.
Originally, this hole and one in back of it behind the trees, the 3rd were shared fairways, a fancy modern day meaning that the holes had maximum distance of boundries on at least one side. That slope you see in the back ground enabled a much more difficult but safe angle to go at the hole. Taking the Cape-like right, required a much more severe route that didn't suffer fools. It was a pretty sharp drop-off to the right side of the hole from about 165 yards in, to a green that followed the downhill nature of the site. In the early 60's all of this changed when they built all of it up about 4 to 5 feet, reshaped the drop-off's and created a less then inspiring natural flow of things. The hole is still tough, but back in the old days, it must have been really fun when playing the ground game.
View from the 7th tee, which was another shared fairway with the 8th. That chunk of hillside you see is actually that, hillside that came down in the GREAT storm of 1938. Similar to the Valley Club of Montecito's 11th, and just as impossible to repair, it too actually still works for the hole.
Corey Miller does Ted Robinson!
Incriminating picture isn't it!?!?!?! Corey, who maybe a SoCal resident sooner then he wishes, stands at the par 3, 16th in the evening hours, a once natural Redan that had a small meandering creek flow-up its left side past the hole and down the canyon. In the 1960's, they dammed-it up because they didn't like the look of the natural creek, and created a pond. That pond got ugly, and then in the mid 70's Master Award Winning Golf Architect, Theadore Robinson Sr. built this monstosity of a raised green with a beautiful and serene pot bunker, bulkheaded by logs that junts out into the pond itself.
Thankfully, the club now realizes just how bad of a golf hole it really is, and they never really used to say anything bad about it until I got them all talking about how much they really did hate it!