I'd be happy to Jim.
Four Hills has gone under the knife since you saw it last. Paul and Baxter worked miracles on the bunkers. I never saw the old ones, but from Paul's description, they really made the course mucho better by adding "widow peaks" to almost all of the greenside bunkers. These widow peaks not only reward accurate distance, their practicality in diverting water away from everyone of them, is genius. The bottlenecking created by the bunkering was definitely a re-occurring motiff. I especially liked the second green, shaped almost like a light bulb, with the pinch near the front, and a widening in the rear.
The fairway movement at Four hills is IMO the strongest design element, save for those tricky greens. There's even one hole on the back, that has a marvelous hillside, that is no longer playable, because of the treeline. Reminants of an old bunker, way to the right of this hole, NLE, but would've been, and still could be, a great resto. Local knowledge should aid the member, even though I shot one of my low rounds of the year there, as a virgin.
The greens were just coming out of top-dressing and took I full advantage by ram-rodding my comebackers home. They seemed to all go in. Conditions were good to great and the relatively new superintendant deserves alot, if not all of the credit.
The trees were not that big a hinderence (even for me) but certainly 9 or 10 shot diactators, is too many. I especially liked the short par 4 (#5)dogleg right, OB left, with a perfectly placed bunker on the inside elbow. Paul Ortiz kept teasing Baxter, saying he was going to have to comeback and move those bunkers, because Baxter kept challenging them, with ample reward upon success. Another potential positive from key tree removal, would open-up some of the vistas of Mt. Taylor( 90 miles away) and the whole valley leading up to her.
I had heard of the membership structure changes and from all accounts they have really worked. The course was full of activity, but did not play slow.
Considering the ground they had to work with, Bob Baldock, has earned my respect.