I had previously received an email from Bill Amick, ASGCA Fellow, about this thread and he has agreed that I could post it. I found it insightful and I'm thankful he has allowed me to share it with the yahoos who frequent this site.
BTW, Bill is currently in Romania walking the center lines of the country's first 18 hole golf course. He feels the course is a lock to break into the Top Ten there.
His email follows;
Hi Paul of our ASGCA,
From time to time I scan posts of subjects on the GolfClubAtlas.com Discussion Group that would seem interesting to me. That way even an aging golf course architect can learn or realize new things. For purely personal reasons your "Can an Archie get too old?" caught my attention. Being 75 puts me in "in danger". Yet I'm still fooling some clients I guess because of my longevity, having started working for Bill Diddel in 1955 and opening my practice in 1959.
I don't have the answer for your purely hypothetical question in regard to me or as it could apply to other course architects. I can only offer a few thoughts which I hope you'll find of some interest, since you posed the question you did.
Definitely those who started or early got into using computers and other recent tools of the trade are much better at those than we who long used pens on velum or mylar over topos.
On other aspects as the newer grasses and such, I'm not so sure youth necessarily has the edge. Too quick and insufficiently tested innovations a few times have led to unsatisfactory results for owners.
Repeating methods and design techniques over time might be labeled as doing the same old things for too long. But if those have proved to work are generally accepted by golfers and a designer suitably adapts those to each site and situation, what's so bad? Grabbing onto trends because they are trendy for a time can also have its limitations.
From seeing a lot of other golf course architects come up and go down the pike, in an oversimplified way gezers appear to go in one of two ways. The critics and hard competitors in their early days in time kind of get even more difficult to be around. The other larger group tends to get more tolerant of the work of their peers. They understand that each practitioner in their individual way is trying to do the best course they can for their clients and the future golfers. A really great thing and I'm sure you have sensed it, is that most ASGCA members encourage that latter group and isolates the behavior of the former.
I feel (perhaps erroneously) my routings have tended to get better with experience, even though like most of us I thought mine were pretty superior in the beginning. I see some of my earlier layouts and realize some of their significant flaws. Maybe it's because I still really like and continue to be stimulated by doing routing plans. Especially on an exciting site that offers the opportunity for lots of interesting holes. I search harder now for what seems the best balance of holes and I'm not so impatient when I first find one that works fairly well.
If you are a little concerned, you will not be too old for a long, long, long time, if ever. And continue to enjoy a little wine at the end of difficult days and wearing weeks. Youth has no advantage in that reward. In fact one can learn moderation in this activity by remembering the way one felt from not moderating the night before in "the good old days".
ASGCAer Amick