“Tom
I don't know enough about what was common know concerning agriculture and growing grass back in the day. But, I do know that folks were very concerned about growing turf on sandy soil back in the day. Heathlands is easy draining (but nearly as well draining as legends suggest), but these same attributes may have made some believe that growing turf would be difficult.”
Sean:
I think it is almost essential to understand not just the concerns of growing turf suitable for golf back in that day but also the reasons why they had those concerns on all the impervious clay soil sites golfers and architects had been laying out the first rudimentary courses on in INLAND England in the decades before the so-called break-through that took place in the Heathlands around the turn of the century.
Today, we may just assume that it really makes little difference to the growing of decent turf for golf where a course is built no matter what the soil makeup is because it is so common today to easily amend it, but that was just not the case back then----eg it had probably not even been thought of much less remotely understood.
I believe it is completely missing the point of the importance of the first real nexus in understanding of golf architecture and golf agronomy INLAND to suggest that people back then on inland sites ‘thought it inadvisable to look for sites of the soil structure and soil makeup unique to the inland English heathlands.' I think as Geoffrey Cornish has always inferred they simply had not yet discovered it inland or understood all its inherent benefits to the future of decent golf turf and decent playability.
His point is it was remarkably similar to the natural linksland in soil structure (sandy and well draining) but it was also quite similar in soil "makeup" that promoted the use of those two natural golf grasses God and Nature gave to the Scottish linksland---eg festuca (fescue) and agrostis (bent).
I think understanding all the ramifications and factors involved in this is absolutely essential to understanding why the heathlands was considered to be such a revolutionary break-through to those people back then. And I think if we fail to see it today as they did back then we will never be able to understand that time and all that the English heathlands meant to them not just in golf course architecture but in the first efforts ever to begin to develop decent agronomy for golf outside linksland or coastal sites on INLAND sites around the world.
The fact is the Scottish linksland did not just offer beautiful and hugely effective terrain to play golf over it also offered NATURALLY a soil “makeup” on which two types of grass (bent and fescue) grew naturally on those expanses of land they referred to as “swards” (the first natural fairways for golf) with almost NO NATURAL competition!
To date my understanding of why it was that way so long ago on that kind of soil “makeup” which the heathlands was so similar to was those two types of natural golf grasses (festuca and agrostis) were essentially the only ones that could survive in that kind of acidity. The fact that they also just happened to be naturally almost perfect to play golf on was something that could only be said was an incredibly lucky stroke of fate for the existence of golf and its future.
Of course they had to seed the heathland courses because the types of “meadow” grasses they had been using on natural inland impervious clay soiled sites had become really unacceptable for golf for a whole host of reasons not the least reasons being they have said they were either baked rock-hard or alternatively soggy!
The discovery of the English heathlands apparently for the first time resolved those two problems INLAND and may’ve had far more to do with golf agronomy than with architecture but it is up to us to understand how important the one was to the other back then, and how that had probably not theretofore been realized or understood.
I think very few of us today understand or appreciate how important to those men back then the original nexus of golf agronomy and golf architecture INLAND really was and why! In this way the English heathlands are probably just as seminal to the future of golf as the Scottish linksland was centuries before it.
Again, I think a remark like, ‘At that time it was considered unadvisable to make a course over sandy ground overgrown with heather', may seem inconsequential and innocence but in truth it is extremely inaccurate in an historical context.
I think the truth is it was considered to be extremely "advisable" and it was just a matter of finding it somewhere INLAND, and they first found it in the INLAND English heathlands around the turn of the century underneath a ground- cover of heather and rhododendrens, Scottish pine and fir!
This is why, although Cornish may seem fairly general in their explanations of this important place and era they are, in my opinion, far more historically accurate! And it's probably no wonder as Geoffrey Corinish being an architect and long-time student of golf and architecture probably understands the history of golf agronomy too a lot better than most of us on here, including some of our IMO piece writers.
And this is precisely why I think some of our IMO piece essay writers who even admit what they are doing with their essays and the research they do for them is a learning process for them, should cast and couch the things they say in those essays much more in the form of "questions" and "inquiry" and much less in the form of assumptions, and premises and conclusions of "FACT."