Paul,
I've sent you a scan of the Mill Hill brochure and score card via E-mail. It's sandwiched between the A1 (by this stage a full dual carriageway) and the M1 on gently rolling land with more than a touch of heathland about the feel. Trees line most fairways but I remember them as being more to keep the traffic screened off than as inhibiting strategic factors. I played there several times in the 70s with a society and the course was invariably in good condition, with fast-running fairways and firm greens and in those days it seemed to be one of the best-value green fees in the London suburbs. I can't recall what the green complexes and bunkers were like, but I suspect that there will have been much change through the years with widening of the A1 and construction of the motorway. The clubhouse is linked to the course by a tunnel under the A1. If you plan to visit you have to contrive to be on the southbound carriageway of the A1 or you can't drive in to the clubhouse.
I agree totally about Slough. Last autumn I was soloist in a concert there which I think was the very worst professional concert it's been my misfortune to be involved in! Lamentable and utterly incompetent conductor!
Hankley Common is a must-visit for anyone who wants to see how a heathland course should be maintained. It's outside the 30-mile radius. It's part of a big nature conservancy area.
Darren - glad you made it to New Zealand. I think it's very engaging and full of character. What did you think of it? Melbourne had certainly entered my mind as a city with more than its faor share of top-ranked courses. But I've never played golf there, so I cannot comment, only dream.
Paul,
I'm interested in what you say about the two Moor Park courses. I don't remember enough about the West to make a sensible comment, but the High has remained firmly in the mind for many years. (I walked some of it again as a reminder when I did the Globetrotter Guide). In truth, there are few courses which have a collection of short holes to equal those at The Addington. I like the 1st with its slightly forbidding drive across the road, uphill past bunkers, bearing right to a narrow green with bunkers low to the right and a big, long one to the left. The 2nd is about position from the tee with a left-to-right angled green and tight bunkering, and bunkers completely surround the short 3rd. heading out to the north end of the course, the 4th is very exposed to the wind and the upslope to the green puts it on the very limit of my strength to get on in two. For a good golfer I'm sure the 5th is dull (drive short of wide cross-bunker short of green and simple pitch) but a bunker of that kind intimidates golfers of my feeble character! The 6th is fairly mundane, while the fairway bunkering on the 7th is entirely in my range (too short for today's tigers). 8 is a very serious hole, 467 yards from the back. The slopes on the fairway as it curls past the pond make it a very uncertain bogey 5 for me, though a low-handicapper's strength should take most of those slopes out of play. The 9th is a fairly disappointing par 5.
We're now at the opposite end of the site from the 4th green and the 10th is a mischievous short par 3 with bunkers at the front and serious drop-offs to either side and through the back. 11 is all slopes, downhill off the tee to a narrow gap between trees on the left and a ditch on the right, then steeply up over a line of cross-bunkers to an egg-timer green. The bunkering at the meorable 12th has been changed with no bunker on the direct route (I'll E-mail you a couple of photos). I thought the 13th was a corker of a par 5 with a wicked bunker on the right exactly where an average drive will finish when pushed right by the sloping fairway. The green-front bunkering is thought-provoking. I found the 14th very tough with a big slope up to the green (even assuming I cleared the stream with my second) which is very wide but only 17 yards deep. The 15th continues to stretch a golfer of my limited ability, requiring two very full shots yet with the slope magnifying the effect of the gentle right-hand dog-leg. Perhaps the par 5s (the 13th excepted) are not the most engaging feature of the course, the 16th fairly bland. When I played a mtch here back in the 70s I was 5 down with 5 to play. A birdie on 17 brought it back to 1 down and a chip in from the front right bunker at the 18th squared the match, so I like these last five holes! I realise that you can't get a big gallery round the 18th, perched on the side of a hill by the road, but it is a jolly good finisher.
Enough essay writing!
Mark.