"JES II - Excellent points.
You make me rethink what I've said and I must add:
I guess it's not just following the ball that we do in golf - that is too simplistic and you make me realize that. The ball also provides us with a chance for "vicarious adventure" in that it is an extension of ourselves, AND IT CAN FLY!!! I know it sounds childish in a way - but it's true."
Adam:
Firstly, it's nice to see someone on here say to someone else, 'you make me rethink what I've said'. That's pretty rare on this website. Most on here say something and defend what they say to the nth degree despite what anyone else says in response.
Personally, I don't think just following the golf ball with a walk is what's so fascinating about golf, although I guess I could certainly understand if some feel that way.
There most certainly is some 'vicarious adventure' in hitting a golf ball successfully but what that 'vicarious adventure' is truly all about is certainly one of the most inscrutable and ongoing mysteries about the game or sport of golf. That the golf ball flies over things or skitters along the ground and we can't or don't may be part of it and is probably a huge subject for another day.
Obviously taking a walk across an interesting piece of land is a nice thing to do for the enjoyment of what you're seeing or feeling or getting from it but to me there's never been any contest involved in a walk unless I'm attempting to count my steps for some reason from point A to Point B taking into consideration the physical problems of the geography.
I feel the fact that we can propel a stationary ball with such seemingly odd implements and with the fairly odd motion we use the various distances and specific directions we sometimes can is perhaps the true underlying seduction of golf for most. Otherwise people probably wouldn't enjoy the time they practice as much as they do.
Then take that separate fascination or even "vicarious adventure' (perhaps mostly that the ball can fly or skitter along the ground as it does and we can't) and put that on a golf course where these various contests begin, with a human opponent, with the land and even with numbers and obvoiusly there's a lot going on----a lot of adventures, a lot of differing sensibilities, some vicarious and others pretty damn personal.
There's potentially a lot to think about and talk about in a thread like this. If we start to break golf down into all it's component parts and then apply them to golf courses and architecture the discussion and the stories could become almost endless. Some of those things probably are extensions of ourselves in some ways and others really aren't, at least in my opinion. Personally I've never thought of my golf clubs and the balls I use as extensions of myself but maybe others do. This idea of "be the ball" is one of the funniest and most ludicrous I've ever heard.
As Behr said about a few things to do with golf architecture, 'they are independent of us', is probably a lot of what makes for the fascinating and adventurous "contests" involved in golf.
But then all this must be why golf intriques some of us so---if it's anything it certainly isn't simple or easy to understand all the reasons why it can be so fascinating to so many.