Just finished playing 4 courses in the Prairie of Eastern Kansas / Central Missouri / Western Illinois - Prairie Highlands (Olathe, KS), Nicklaus Club at Lionsgate, Gateway National and the brand new Art Schaupeter course at Old Hawthorne in Columbia, MO. Since I played the latter with Art, I have a better understanding of it than the other three.
On one level, these courses all look and feel the same - generous, straightforward fairways with well defined landing areas - a border of short, playable rough in case the ball drifts a little off line - all surrounded by 18-24 inch tall prairie grass.
Of the four, it looks like the most earth was moved at Gateway National - I was told it used to be an industrial area that was reclaimed. One thing I enjoyed there is the mounding between each fairway creating a secluded environment for each hole - the only golfers I saw were those in the group ahead and our group.
The experience of waking Old Hawthorne with Art was something special for a GCA neophyte like me - just to look at the design features and hear what he was thinking as the project developed was amazing. The course sets in an old ranch that was very wooded - much of the woods still surround the course, and once in while, a tree or two will come into play - like the giant oak about 100 yards out from the #10 green. #10 is a par five sloping down the hill to the right and over a creek to the green. Can hit the 2nd shot two places - down the right to the end of the fairway and chip over the creek to the green or a longer 2nd shot to the front of the green, providing you can hit right of the big tree. There is, as you can imagine, some controversy about that tree - but, if it doesn't work, it can always be cut down. Wonderful choices!
I'm not going to give you the entire course here - every hole is thoughtfully unique, and lays into the land (at least to my untrained eye) very naturally. A very good walk - unspoiled.
So, I am off to STLCC today - McDonald / Raynor old classic. I have the the hole by hole descriptions in my hip pocket from GCA.
Later,
DB