I played Sugarloaf Mountain yesterday in the Orlando area, a course that is good for Florida golf but otherwise mediocre, especially by C&C standards. I played with my brother who doesn't think about architectural things often but generally has a pretty good idea of what he likes and dislikes and the reasons for that. Despite the fact that the course was in horrendous condition (worse than I generally like and I am certainly on the minimal side of things), we tried to look at the holes for their various architectural merits and all in all had a good time. On or about the 13th hole my brother had this comment, which I think was quite good and worth of discussion here:
"While most of these holes have individual architectural merit, they are all independent of one another. There is no continuity or flow to the course." I asked what he meant by that and he said "well, for starters you cant see any other hole on the course from the hole you are playing. This usually leads to a lost ball if you dont hit the architect's designated playing area. Really, there is no difference between this course and desert golf."
We then discussed our preference for the more traditional course where there is a proximity to the routing and although a course doesnt have to be a series of holes going back and forth, you can see other holes from the hole you are playing and the course flows together over a piece of land. We discussed the amount of acreage used to make many of the great courses today and wondered if even though they are walkable, they lose some of their flow due to the isolation in which each hole is played.
I don't quite know yet which side I fall on but I do tend to prefer places such as Seminole, the front nine at Crystal Downs or Belvedere for example, over places like Calusa Pines or Sugarloaf Mountain or many of the modern courses where each hole is played independent from the last. Does the search for the ideal land for every hole create a course with 18 great holes but not an overall golf course?