“TEPaul,
If you equate the look, texture and vegetation in HHA, today, or 82 years ago, with the look at Shinnecock as posted in Wayne's aerials you're in serious need of an eye doctor, OR, Coorshaw needs to get the the vet as soon as possible.
Just go to page 57 in Geoff Shackelford's "The Golden Age of Golf Design" and you'll see how drastically different those two features are.”
Patrick;
The look of those sand waste areas in those 1938 photos of Shinnecock above are very different from the look of those same areas of Shinnecock today (or in the 1990 aerials above) and that’s precisely why Wayne posted those comparative photos of Shinnecock. The look of HHA in 1925 (p. 57 of GeoffShac’s book) is different from the look of HHA today (today it’s more maintained, cleaner and not as “broken up”).
The point I’m making is that the look of HHA in 1925 (p. 57 in GoeffShac’s book) is similar to the look Flynn created on holes #5 and #6 at Shinnecock. I’m suggesting that look should be restored today at Shinnecock. I’d also suggest that look of HHA at PVGC in 1925 should be restored today!! If you want to see what that look on #5 and #6 at Shinnecock actually looked like in those early years don’t just refer to the aerials of Shinnecock in 1938 above, refer to the on-ground photo of #5 Shinnecock on p. 108 of GeoffShac’s book!
Wayne and I are fairly convinced that early look that Flynn created (what he referred to in his design “instructions” as “undulated sand areas” ) are a constructed imitation of what was done on various holes of PV, including HHA! The reasons we believe Flynn imitated this aspect of PVGC at Shinnecock is because of the work Flynn did at PVGC, the fact that he belonged to that club and the fact that he clearly copied some of the unique features of PVGC including the unique “interrupted fairway” idea (which Flynn virtually advertised on various of his designs) as well as his fairly common use of greens that were “islands in sand” of which almost half of the greens of PVGC were in those days! Not to mention that on one early "iteration" of Flynn's plans for Shinnecock #16 had a 100 yard total forced carry sand waste area in the middle of #16 very similar to the 100 yard long sand waste forced carry area of PVGC's HHA. Not only that but Flynn also created another 100 yard long HHA forced carry concept in the middle of another par 5 iteration at Shinnecock that was never built!!
We also have Hugh Alison’s excellent multi-page review of Flynn’s design plans for Shinnecock that the club obviously asked Alison to produce. In that Alison review which is both general and hole by hole, Hugh Alison not only explains how those areas on holes #5 and #6 were created but what the purpose of them was both in look and in play (“…..it is intended to create a stretch of broken ground….this broken ground will not be merely rough, and will not be a more or less flat expanse of land. It will be completely broken up with hollows, dunes, marram and lime grass, and with tongues of rough. The object will be to obtain a great deal of colour contrast, and also to make as sure as possible that any ball played into this area will lie badly. The scheme….is excellent, but its merit depends on the manner in which the work is carried out…..”
Joke around about my eyes and Coorshaw if you want to but now is probably not the best time to do that. We know what we're talking about and we have all kinds of cross-referenced documentation to prove it and clearly you don't! This type of research is good stuff and our sense was that those we spoke with while at Shinnecock with all this research were appreciative of it. Whether or not they actually restore those areas remains to be known. Issues of how much it would take to do it and to keep it that way obviously is an issue. It's one thing for you to just disagree with me automatically but this issue of those designed and created "broken ground" sand waste areas on parts of Flynn's Shinnecock is important and it would frankly be awesome to see the club restore them. The look of them from the tees of their holes was intended to be one of visual intimidation and that should be restored! Shinnecock is clearly a very great world class championship golf course and these areas were a purposeful and intended part of it. The course is great now but in my opinion, and in Wayne's, this would make it even better. It would be a clear and hopefully exact restoration of a unique and important architectural feature!
Do you disagree with that?