On the hotly debated (well, at least I hotly debated it......
) internal green contours thread, someone mentioned the greatness of greens that take a lifetime to learn.
Fair enough. My question is, how much of that is design, and how much is playing it in different seasons, under shade or sun, if applicable, after aerifiying, or any of a variety of natural or maintenance conditions?
How much of it is the variety the gca puts in other greens - ie presuming that there is contour variety and not all are designed based on, say 2% swales.
How much is attributable to moving the pins around and putting from a naturally occuring variety of angles to those pins based on your different approach shots?
And, if there are internal contours, such as a ridge or a tier that show up between your ball and the pin, can you ever really judge those, or do you learn that it will likely just take your ball away from the hole (or does it just seem that way, like always feeling like you got in the slow lane at the supermarket or toll booth?)
Which leaves the last question, how much is actually attributable to the architecture, and what specific examples can you give that are truly the architecture requiring the lifetime of learning, even for those who are not green reading challenged?