With an upcoming visit to the Volunteer State, I've got another day at Sweetens in sight. I'm not going for the Sugarloaf Social Club event, but anyone in the sphere of their social media presence has been bombarded with lead-up hype. The other day they posted their custom scorecard for the event, which included the actual course layout and an additional nine-hole routing composed of various "secret holes" including a par-3 from near 4 green over water to 6 green, a par-5 from 8 tee to 9 green, and plenty of others (2 is the only hole that plays the same in both routings). I'd post the picture, but I've never been successful at posting images here.
I'd heard about plenty of secret holes at Sweetens Cove, but never seen them fleshed out on a map. Concepts like this strike a chord with me because of the brand of golf I grew up playing on minimally planted, practically flat MN farm courses. When a course tips out at 5500 yards for a par of 70, you eventually start inventing longer, or at least more interesting, holes than the ones laid out for you. Moreover, it satisfies that armchair architecture dream just a little when you come up with a particularly creative hole, even if it's unsound or whatever since you can't move any dirt or trees.
I'm curious to hear about others' experiences with unorthodox holes, routings, etc. Do other courses have alternate holes like Sweetens, or have you ever created your own holes to spice up those Doak 1s or 2s? I've personally found myself looking at maps of relatively treeless courses I've played and imagining the kind of holes that could be played if I had the opportunity to play those courses frequently. Perhaps it's not within the 'orthodox' ideas of GCA, but I believe a golf course can only be better if it allows the golfer to devise their own way about the property on a day when business is slow.