I've always wondered about the amount of time that Donald Ross spent on-site while designing the three courses of his (that I know of) in Colorado. I'd posted quite some time back wondering if he had ever been on-site during the creation of Wellshire, and it appears that he WAS on-site, according to those who responded to that earlier post (Mark Fine was one, if I remember correctly, who had a lot of knowledge regarding Ross' time in Colorado). I believe that someone posted that he came up to work on Wellshire during his time in the state desigining the Broadmoor course down in Colorado Springs. The other Colorado course of his that I know of is the Lakewood Golf Club. For what it's worth, the Donald Ross Society lists the dates for all three courses, with Lakewood listed as 1916, the Broadmoor as 1918, and Wellshire as 1926, however I don't know enough (and haven't researched enough) to say if this means that he made more than one trip to Colorado, or if it just took different amounts of time for the various courses to open. I'd love to hear from the experts on this.
It seems as if, of the three, the Broadmoor is the most highly-regarded, but I'd be interested in the opinions of those who have played all three. It would also be interesting to find out how much time Ross spent on-site working on each course, and then to compare that with just how good each course was when he was done with it. In other words, did more time on-site equate to a better course.