Niall, do you think that the raised foreground was to hide the burns or was he trying to place a ramp before the burn to allow runners to be launched over it?
Earlier someone posed the ? "Can a Course be consisdered great if it takes 4 or 5 rounds to understand it?" I wonder, if the flip-side isn't the real ? "Can a Course be consisdered great if it DOESN'T takes 4 or 5 rounds to understand it?"
I think I see where TD is going here but there seems to be a mixing of whether the course Features or its Strategies are immediately obvious. If the Features are all obvious, ergo, shouldn't the Strategy? But if they are not, then the Strategy isn't either.
Or can you have a course where, even tho the features are apparent, the Best strategy isn't? And it takes several go-rounds to ascertain what the best strategy is? I think this is what the Talking Stick North reference was to - sure there are big fairways out there but you need to find the right spots - just being "in the fairway" isn't the end-all. Sure, we can can manufacture obfracation by routing around hillocks or leaving(producing) them in the fairways, to hide what comes after ("oh, there's more room out there than it appears")
Perhaps the problem we have in trying to assess the qualities of the ordained Great Courses is that, even if we are fortunate to be able to play them - and enough of them so comparisons can be made, we typically don't get to play them multiple times and hence must render our judgements based on limited or singular exposure. This is probably more true for those on this site, as GCA people seem to be golf explorers, always looking for that next great experience. For example, if an American goes 3 times to GB&I, how many repeat plays will he get in? Or will he try to knock of as many Bucket List courses as possible. My guess is the bucket list wins more times than not.