I got to see a lot of interesting golf courses in 2012. Over 3 continents, sand greens, lava rocks, landfills and more, Sutton Bay, near Pierre, South Dakota stands out as having the most interesting and unique site of the year for me. As the original golf course at Sutton Bay gets transitioned out, I wanted to share some pictures of a really good golf course that perhaps explain the situation... A sad situation, Sutton Bay is/was a good golf course on a spectacular site.... My condolences to Mark A, and the members
Ran's 2006 profile in Courses by Country of Sutton Bay before the ground started to slip
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/courses-by-country/usa/sutton-bay-sd-usa/This a crack going though the 6th tee
A playable crack through a fairway... cannot tell if it was fixed or just small and not worth fixing
An irrigation break... originally pvc, many of the breaks have been fixed with hdpe, which has stronger connections and fused together to limit the aprox 120 (i think this is the number?!) irrigation breaks a year
#7 tee.. seems like the old tee was where the ground started slipping on left, and further back
An abandoned hole... it was replaced by a par-3 which plays to the original practice green
#9... great view from one of the return holes. Sutton Bay has an out/back routing
View across the landcape
#13 from a slip turned cart path
An elevation view of a slip on #15