Leo & Melvyn
You guys have highlighted for me the two sides of this tricky coin.
We agree it has to be by the sea and built on sand with not too many trees (it can have some- think of Carnoustie). so then it comes down to...
On one hand, to be a true links, no matter where it is in the world, it must have traditional cool-season grasses – i.e bents and fescues like all the great links in the UK,
OR
On the other hand, can it have grasses native to that environment (– and here we are really referring to warm-season grasses like Couch, Kikuyu, bermudagrass etc) and still be a links because of its location?
I imagine there are thousands of locations by the sea in tropical or sub-tropical regions where you could build a golf course on a seaside sandy 'linksland', but only grow cool season grasses by having a lot of irrigation and other inputs. Is this a links? I guess it is, but it has required a lot of work/money for it to fit within the perimeter of the definition. I like the idea of reducing the reliance on inputs. Not just because of the environmental benefits, but because this course should be less expensive (to build and play). But now it is not a links??
Man, I just keep thinking we need a sub-category.
And 'links-like' doesn't do it for me. Anyone?
scott