Tom:
I've spent most of the day with this thread in the back of my mind, in fact, I thought about it before going to bed last night as well.
Without delving too much into the metaphysical, I think part of the mystique of the golf course is that the sheer scale of the "art" lends itself to a lot of mini-discoveries and mystery over the time of ones relationship with the course.
I remembered a night back in the summer of 2002 where I first really felt the "pull" of the golf course architecture mystique. For as long as I can remember, I've studied maps. Road maps, topographic maps and even tourist maps. I don't know, but I find the graphic representations of man's progress to be intriguing.
Anyway, on this particular evening, a non-golfing friend of mine had recently acquired Microsoft Streets and Maps and a GPS unit for his Laptop. Being a nerd, we both wanted to give it a whirl and I decided to suggest we use the GPS to find several area golf courses that I had never bothered to go find. I knew of their existance from simply reading maps.
As we drove near the course, I began to feel a knot in my stomach as though we could be stumbling upon something. I began to conjure up thoughts of an "ultra-secret" golf club which mirrored the Skull and Bones Society in terms of secrecy and the NSA in terms of information. Could it be possible to stumble on such a place in the suburbs of Philadelphia? Probably not, but my imagination started to run wild.
We approached the golf course, as per the map - but around us was nothing but houses...
We turned on the street which I thought contained the entrance road, but again.... new development.
An NLE.
I pulled over and got out of the car. In the streetlight of 11PM, I could get a sense of the terrain the course sat upon and began to walk, my imagination wild as to how the old golf course could have been routed when my eyes caught something across the street.
There lying in the moonlight was the unmistakable form of an old tee box, just a dead flat square pointing off down the hill.
The point is, like most art, golf courses have both the time test and scale to inspire the imagination. How often have you looked at old features of a golf course and wondered what was? Grown over bunkers, old tee boxes, former green sites.
Should I be blessed to design courses, I'd love to build in little curiosities that get the imagination of the golfer paying attention going. The other, I was just thinking about what it would be like to grade and design an alternate green on a hole, with full irrigation, and then to let it just grow into rough and gate off the irrigation loop until someone finds it years later....
Wouldn't it be fun to find an alternate green by accidentally opening up the gate valve on an old irrigation line?