Hello all,
Thank you very much for your thoughts and helpful information. I had already written the response paper when I posted the question on the site: (what combatitive measures could golf courses take against the negative effects of global warming?). So I hope you don't feel like I was using you for my own personal academic gain. I wanted to know if anyone out there had any interesting insight into this matter to weigh against my own thoughts on the matter.
The paper was approximately 3000 words and was supposed to only briefly touch on the explanation and scientific support of the idea of global warming. The body of the paper was to be creative and inventive, pertaining to any wide and far-reaching personal thoughts on how this hypothetical or possibly tangible situation could be remedied.
At age 23 I've played only about 20 different links courses now, in the States and in Scotland, and have realised that most links courses would probably not be harmed because of large dune or beach buffers and their height above the sea (Kiawah). However, I have also noticed that courses like Dunbar in Scotland or Galveston Municipal in Texas are only slightly above sea level. In many places on these courses, the sea rises up over the land, especially during storms, because there is nothing to stop it. Dunbar's Castle course is in danger of losing it's 5th green because of this and the routing will have to be completely rearranged once it is destroyed (which will be very soon regardless of rising water levels).
Courses like the two previously mentioned will undoubtedly be underwater in many places if the predicted water rising actually occurs. My thoughts on the mitigation and eventual subjugation of the damages caused by these predictions were highly philosophical, artistic and only somewhat practical. I reached as far back into my demiurgic mind for the process of creating these ideas and I cannot tell if what I've written will stand solidly as proper academic writing. But I actually don't care anyway.
James and Jon, the program is going well, only straight A's until now and hopefully that won't change. I wish I could stay in school forever. You can actually use your creative talents here and be rewarded for them as opposed to many GCA firms that only want a generic finished product devoid of any art. I'd rather be unemployed and dirt poor for the next ten years working for myself than under the dark shroud of a big name company. Never again, I've got too much going to waste it somewhere I will never be seen.
On a lighter note, Kiawah is calling my name, and the 27-30th, I'll be researching the Ocean Courses possible susceptibilities to rising ocean levels. Ha, ha,
Derek