"If you look closely, you'll see that areas that appear to be cleared, aren't cleared, they're just covered with shorter trees and vegetation."
Pat:
Interesting observation, but you're wrong, as usual
. Areas that Crump was looking at for potential holes and parts of holes that were never used (that show up on that 1925 aerial) were cleared of trees though not ground cover vegetation. I can easily point them out to you, where they were, and even what his potential holes or parts of holes that were never used were all about and even probably why they were given up for something else that was built.
Those areas were definitely cleared of trees and the reason was so he could look at them for potential holes. He obviously did not need to clear ground cover vegetation to see those potential holes and parts of potential holes and since they were never used and built on (turfed) he never needed to clear out the ground cover vegetation we can see in those 1925 aerials.
There was a time in the late 1920s when the club got into a really massive tree planting, terracing and revegetating program in a project the club history refers to as "Stabilizing the Course" or "Holding the Course Together."
What I'd never really tried to consider before is WHEN they really were replanted with trees, and perhaps even why. The 1953 aerial compared to the 1925 aerial appears to tell that story pretty well.
I hope that even you, Patricio, can figure out what that so-called "Stabalizing the Course" or "Holding the Course Together Project" was about and the purpose of it! But perhaps you can't. Are you sure you don't want to enroll in my Adult Continuing Education class on golf course architecture with a minor in the history and evolution of PV, Patrick? Again, I will give you the ultra deep super secret discount price on the class.