Thought I'd chime in real quick on the golf I played in New England with absolutely ideal weather. Oh yeah, and I missed yet another hurricane.
Wintonbury Hills
This is known to many because of Dr. Brad Klein's involvement with the city of Bloomfield Hills in getting a municipal course ready for play. Designed by Tim Liddy under the Pete Dye badge, the site was not their first choice and is less than ideal. Despite a rugged hilltop, powerlines, wetlands, and land constraints - for example, the driving range is about a third of a mile down the road - Wintonbury Hills is delightfully playable and intrigues the player with ground game options not found on many new courses. Fairways tend to be wide and the greens are almost as wild and kooky as Sand Hills'.
The Ranch
Add up '666' and you get 18. This 18 was my first trip around a track designed by Damian Pascuzzo. For lack of a better name, I will now call doglegging short par 4s offering a big advantage for long-hitting risk-takers as Enghfers. (Anyone who has seen the par fours at Sanctuary knows the origin of this moniker. The Ranch has about four Enghfers (#2 and #6 on the front, at least one, maybe three on the back!) and two KRAZY downhill par 5s (#9 and #16) that evoke memories of Kapalua Plantation. Immaculately groomed but offering no level lies, I loved it. A few holes left me scratching my head... yet dying to get another crack at their wackiness.
The Orchards
Unusual site of the 2004 U.S. Women's Open - the clubhouse is hardly big enough for a foursome to have lunch - the Orchards is a sweet Donald Ross layout with a nice blend of long-short, easy-hard, fade-draw, up-down, and plain-busy. Put simply, great design balance. A clear strength is that it is very rewarding of shots executed according to plan, but rather penal on misses. Many modern longer courses have been stripped of character. This is a direct and distinct contrast to the modern work of Fazio, Hills, or Rees. In keeping with the theme of the trip, flat lies are a rarity.
Longmeadow
It had been 7 years since I'd played this course and it was every bit as good as I remembered, maybe better. Knowing that this has fallen off the Golfweek "America's Best" says a lot about the 100 courses on the list; Longmeadow is a solid 7 in Doak parlance. (Whether Tom Doak afforded this ranking, I know not.) Home to the 2005 U.S. Junior that will be televised on ESPN. Make a point to watch if you want to see a great par 70.
Next year may be Taconic, Crumpin-Fox, Pittsfield, and Whitinsville. It sure seems like there is a lot of great golf in the area.
One final thought, the Orchards has a lot of similarity to Eau Claire - the course I have called "The Best Course You've Never Heard Of".