Wow! A second set of great pictures! Thanks for posting these, Tim. The course looks great.
I'd more or less agree with you about the 10 round split between Caledonia and True Blue; I'd put it at 6-5 Caledonia, but only because of the beauty of the surroundings at Caledonia. True Blue as a golf course has really grown on me over the years, and I have an easier time remembering the holes there.
When I'm at MB in July, we try to play TB in the morning, then have lunch at Caledonia and play there in the afternoon. Not only is that a great 36 hole day, but we get to finish on 18 at Caledonia as the sun is setting; the marshes and the clubhouse are just unbelievably beautiful.
The thing that I always tell people about TB is that you have to pick your tees very carefully; it is too hard from the tips for even good golfers to enjoy it very much, IMO.
A.G.--
I definitely agree that players should take care to play from the correct set of tees at True Blue, but I would posit that the better the player, the easier TB gets, much like Tobacco Road. The fairways and greens are so huge that it's really difficult to miss them on most holes. I didn't hit the ball especially well off the tee and I only missed one fairway, playing as far back as possible on each hole. Maybe TB sets up well for me, but I have never thought of the course as terribly difficult at all.
Tim,
Don't forget that you are a far better golfer than 99.9% of the players that tee it up at True Blue, or most anywhere else for that matter. What happens at TB is that a lot of 20 handicappers automatically go to the 2nd set of tees a play a 6800 yd. course and just get killed. From the 3rd set of tees, which are 6300 yds., it is still a LOT of golf course, but egos/ignorance keep a lot of people from going up to that set.
Your comparison of True Blue and Tobacco Rd. is spot on; I've told people many times that TB is a coastal version of TR. But one KEY difference is that True Blue has bermuda greens that just do NOT receive shots like the bent grass greens at the Road, and for high handicappers hitting long clubs into the TB greens, it becomes a quantum leap tougher than what you experience. And getting up and down at True Blue is NOT an easy proposition, even for good golfers.
If you played the tips at TB, my hat is off to you; you're a stick!
All the MB golf talk is getting me excited about my yearly trip in July; unfortunately, it's January and 12 degrees here in Atlanta, which is why I'm at the keyboard instead of getting ready to play in the Sat. a.m. points game at my club. I'm dying here...