Mark and Sean,
It was not my intent to threadjack and these will be my last obsevations on caddie golf in this thread. Your responses are typical of so many others that take the narrow view of caddies in the game. 95% of facilities will NEVER be caddie courses and that is fine. That has never been the issue. It's not supporting caddie golf wherever possible, when it is BY FAR, the single, greatest source of the game's passionate differencemakers and champions...that's the issue.
To others interested,
Anyone that thinks caddie golf's impact stops at the front gate of elite clubs doesn't know their golf history! Let's remove every artifact, names from trophies or written documents, that have caddie roots to thank, from ther R&A. USGA, PGA, World Golf Hall of Fame and every other exhibit or museum worldwide...there would be some pretty empty spaces folks! Guess the cart company lore and epic GPS contributions will fill the void in the future. Please.
Let's go one step further. Remove every golf course that has had an architect involved, or those that constructed it, with caddie roots. What's that course landscape look llike? Sorry, the argument caddie golf has no impact beyond wealthy golfers falls flat.
Golf grew to include the middle class in the U. S., as it still does in many emerging golf nations(think India and China), with a definite boost from caddie golf. Where do you think most of these nation's early professionals have come from? You guessed it. This draws others of modest means(NOT THE WELL OFF) to the game and enables them to access it.
Certainly, there are nations without a caddie dynamic and that is just fine. I will assert that those nation's will never know the benefits, that caddie scholarships and adult mentorship could have, in changing lives for the better of those many young adults that benefit from such an experience, thanks to golf. To those that point to vice and bad influences that caddie yards can have...that is all down to how they are run! That weak argument is like saying no one should drive because you might become a drunk driver.
Even if you golf and never take a caddie in your life, to claim you love the game, respect it, honor the history and tradition, etc. etc., and not be able to bring yourself to acknowledge that the TITANIC impact of caddie golf deserves support and re-investment wherever possible, speaks volumes. Caddies are fellow human beings. Many have used the lessons and time spent in that environment to become some of mankind's significant contributors IN EVERY WALK OF LIFE. That continues...TODAY.
Anything done well is an art. That includes caddie golf. Many caddie experiences fall short of that, just like they do in every other endeavor. How many crap lessons have pros taught ? It's easy to deride or marginalize caddiies' contributions. I find it interesting that many with the strongest opinions against them have hardly ever had the experince.
In my view, caddies shouldn't be mandatory. If the leadership and support of the program are solid, the quality of the experience will be failrly consistent, and folks will take them. Where it gets difficult are clubs or facilities that have a mix of those that support taking caddies, or don't. Thrift has a powerful influence on some; given the choice they'll leave supporting something to others.
I can't afford to take a caddie every round, and certainly don't expect others to do so. The economic reality is every golfer, even those with higher incomes, can't always take a caddie...I get it! That said, most with the means to play higher-end facilities can certainly take caddies some of the time.
My logged in time expired while I was posting this so I apologize for the choppy text. I'm not expecting to convert people who don't wish to take, or have anything to do with caddies, into pro-caddie supporters. My intent is to convey, to those that may have a vague view, or low opinion of caddies, ALL that caddie golf has, AND STILL DOES, contribute to the game..EVERYDAY.
The idea that American golf is expensive is one I see written a lot on this site. Pointing to the upper-end of the market and using that as an indictment of how expensive the game is in the U.S. reflects just part of the picture. The game got bloated here and the market is sorting it out. It always does. There are thousands of courses in America with modest green fees. By the way, many municilpal golf courses, like Cobbs Creek in Philadelphia, hardly the bastion of the well-heeled, had caddies for DECADES. Beth Page, and a few others, STILL DO. With that, I'll retire from this thread.
Cheers,
Kris