Great stuff Mark, thanks. Incidently, drawing on themes from other threads, do you know much about the maintenance practices there, size of crew, visual impression of turgrass quality, impacts of maintenance on play of course. Also, do the streets and homes to left of hole receive much play? How far are these features from the center of the golf hole.
Kelly,
Despite what Bill says, those houses take a pounding. In this years Links Championship (an open competition which is reasonably prestigious in Fife Amateur circles but which hackers up to 12 handicap can play in) my drive (into, I should say, a 35/40 mph wind) disappeared into the front yard of one of my proposers for membership. Cars parked on the road are hit reasonably frequently when the wind is blowing.
Maintenance wise, I'm not certain of numbers but I'd estimate perhaps half a dozen permanent greenkeepers. In the past I have tended to play very early in the morning and have had several discussions with the crew, though not as to maintenance practices. Historically Elie was always fast and firm but recently is has been less so. When BUDA was there in 2008 it was noticeable that the soil was blacker than expected on a links (Mark Bourgeouis started a thread on links maintenance around then, following Malcolm Campbell's presentation at BUDA on how links were at danger of being lost to over-watering and fertiliser).
The greens are usually excellent though always at sensible links speeds (up to about 10 on the stimpmeter - Elie like many British courses which benefit from plenty of US visitors does measure the speeds of its greens every day). The course usually looks immaculate but is at its best when it starts to turn brown, sadly, like so many links these days it tends to get more water than will allow it to turn really brown in summer.
Elie is a reasonably wealthy club and its maintenance crew is well equipped, I do wonder if it hasn't been maintained a little too green in recent years (though we have had a string of wet summers, which might be the problem). Last year I noticed (and a former captain I was playing with commented on) a tendency to allow collars of rough to grow around the greens, taking the ground game out of play to some extent. This apparently was a deliberate move by the current captain. I hope, if that is right, that his successor moves away from that policy and returns to tightly mown grass around the greens. Elie is too short to be a real challenge for the best golfers, except in a strong wind. It is, however, about as much fun as a golf course can be and to move to a softer set up with more rough, particularly around the greens, would detract from that fun without actually achieving the aim of making it any harder.
Mark