Mark, Thanks for a great and high quality photo tour of this highly anticipated course.
The photos indicate a real adventure of golf designed to be endless fun and something different every day, along with teeing grounds well positioned to offer great elasticity as wind changes and the golfer's ambition to take on greater challenge by moving back, but if wisely played -without stepping completely beyond one's playing capability for the mid handicapper.
Given the architects path to this pinnacle of success, and the influences that Mr Whitman has experienced, it seems this course is a culmination of golf design for him. I hope to see this course next year as it tugs at my personal ideals of how a course on such land ought to be built, presented and designed.
But, I guess I'll mention one aspect that doesn't have a great deal of reflection on the golf course design in the actual on-the-ground construction sense, but an aesthetic that is obvious, and perhaps a bit of a regret by those in the development team. That is the backdrop visual of the 9th and 18th holes regarding the unsightly buildings. I don't know the back story on them, though the practical need for a clubhouse on 18 was probably dictated by no other options for lack of other spare land available for the siting of such.
I am left wondering if the building behind 9 couldn't at least be re-painted to earth tone colors? If not owned or controlled by the Cabot Links Enterprise, somehow an offer to incur the cost of a color change. The barn red just doesn't make it and is a distraction from an otherwise beautiful landscape as one plays through that 9th hole corridor, IMHO. And, the style selection of the buildings behind 18 seem a puzzle to me. Perhaps it is a local customary style for that region, however it just sticks out and fights the aesthetic of the great golf course, IMO.
As most know, my personal favorite modest yet authentic minimally constructed along sandy prairie ground naturally sited golf course is Wild Horse. Mr. Whitman's good friend an occasional collaborator in construction, and co-designer of Wild Horse is Dan Proctor. Once several years ago while playing there and contemplating the natural backdrop and setting for that course, Dan lamented how he knew it was inevitable that houses along the periphery would be built, and the roof lines would ultimately detract from the originally envisioned ideal. Here at CL, the detraction had to be known from the beginning, and just the look of the uneven/jagged roofline of the buildings behind 18, simply detracts, regrettably, from what I feel could have been a better last impression of a grand round of golf.
Just my opinion, of course. It would in no way curb my deep desire to make this trip to experience this great golf course.