There are many different ideas on here about what constitutes a great golf course (contrary to the rumors of the paranoid
), and one of the many differentiators is those would value a natural appearance in a golf course and those who are only concerned with playing charateristics (the nebulous "shot values").
To be fair, most of those concerned with appearance claim it is an adjunct to the playing characteristics of a course, even though they are frequently dismissed as only caring about the appearance (or as one esteemed poster put it, they're unnaturally fixated on hairy bunkers). Most of these posters are forced to almost reflexively state that yes, of course the playing characteristics of a golf course are paramount.
Well, I think there is a case to be made that the pursuit of a natural appearance is not merely an aesthetic one - and I will make it!
(Let me add, all those who feel all golf courses are artificial, feel free to check out and ignore the rest - we're obviously talking shades of gray here.)
To me, the pursuit of a natural appearance is far more than just the look of the bunkers. It is the preservation of contours throughout the course (or perhaps the introduction of contours, in faux naturalism). It is allowing the grass to go brown if necessary to maintain firm conditions. It's about rough that is not uniformly lush, or regimented in grades. It's about not manicuring the edges of bunkers to look like landscaping projects. It's about not introducing a big water hazard just so you have a signature hole. It's about not making perfectly symmetrical hazards, especially in a repetitive pattern.
It's about all of these things, and probably a bunch more that I've forgotten to include or maybe don't even know about.
Now, if you think about it,
all of these things have a dramatic impact on the playing characteristics of a course.Preserving contours certainly presents multiple challenges to play, as does contours or dramatic pitches in greens.
Not always going for uniform green grass has a dramatic impact on playing characteristics.
And so on, and so on.
So, it is my own personal opinion that whenever golfers claim to only care about how a course plays, they are either intuitively evaluating these elements, or they are seriously shortchanging both themselves and the golf course with respect to the sport of golf. I believe the game and the course is much more interesting when there is a huge pallet of gray (8 bit or 16 bit grayscale for you computer geeks out there), not just black and white, or 5 shades of gray.
Agree? Disagree? Think I've spent too much time indoors this winter? Think I haven't played enough golf lately?
Please share your thoughts, and when I say that, I mean don't simply answer yes or no, tell me why you feel the way you do.