Mike Cirba, if you happen to stumble into this thread--didn't Mountain Manor have a hole with trees all the way across the fairway?
Wow...winter must be setting in if this thread is already on page 3.
Andy,
Mountain Manor in the Poconos has a lot of things, if memory serves, and it wasn't the hallucinogens.
For one, it's one of the only 45 hole resort complexes in the world that absolutely no-one knows about.
It also has some of the most wildly strange architecture ever built, anywhere.
The original nines, built in the 40s, and known as the blue and yellow nines, are relatively sedate, although the blue nine features a quite cool volcano hole par three that is quite memorable and as you mentioned, the 7th hole of the Yellow nine features a "tree crossing" about 260 yards out that acts as a picket fence..
However, in the 70s/80s, first the Orange, and then the Silver nines were built, and they traversed land that God himself never would have attempted to build golf holes on.
The first hole of the orange is 370 yards and almost unreachable in two, as it must climb over 100 feet from tee to green.
Later on the orange, the 529 yard 8th hole climbs probably another 80 feet, only this time the hole feature a completely blind pond across the entire expanse of the fairway beginning about 180 and requiring a carry of about 230 dead uphill.
All that being said, it doesn't begin to get weird until the Silver nine which sadly now seems to have been abandoned as I look at their website.
The second hole of that nine was a 745 yard par six, 90 degree dogleg right featuring a final shot over water.
I say all this somewhat tongue-in-cheek, but if one wants to truly examine the limits of architecture in a fun, family oriented atmosphere, they absolutely MUST make a trip to Mountain Manor.
...and you know what I'm talking about Andy!