Fascinating and coincidental for me!
This thread was the next one after the one about what one may learn if they sspent a week on a course construction site that they don't know about already. I posted this:
"For me it would be a chance to learn the under-structure of a course as it is being built. The nuts and bolts that without which the top simply wouldn't work... In other words, the why's and how's of drainage. The types of materials that go underneath to promote healthy turf. An understanding of why an undulation is simply that while many other times it is a necessity that allows the overall drainage to work... How routing a course also involves the intertwining, not only of what is seen but what is not; those same underpinnings that allow for an entire area, not just a green site for example, but say several holes, fairways and all, to drain water in ways that will not unexpectedly prevent water from draining elsewhere."
This sounds exactly the situation that I was describing. One where someone sees the top and yet doesn't understand the necessity for why it is as it is (No offense meant Josh). How many would see this course as Josh did where after a few holes they keep saying "water again? What was he thinking of?"
And maybe that's the point, that we simply don't know WHAT the architect was thinking of. Those details known to him and his crew that never get written about yet because they are either required by the site or mandated by the local municipalities, that the finished product becomes less than what it could have been. We'll judge the finished product and the abilities of the architect who designed it in the same way that most of us do cars; based simply on how it looks rather than how it runs, the maintenance needed to keep it running that way, the requirements of the municipalities where we live for emissions, etc...
Hopefully I didn't hijack this thread for that wasn't my aim. I just had my thoughts from the other one fresh in my mind and this case is a prime exaqmple of what I was thinking...
Water is both life and death to a golf course and in ways that few of us, including myself, simply don't understand.