I like Pacific Dunes a hair better. It has a charm and intimacy, a subtle rhythm of golf, that to me is unmatched anywhere. It's little and challenging and oh so pretty.
John K - that is a most interesting description for a course by the sea. Pray tell, how do you think TD captured this charm and intimacy out on the coast, with no trees to act as framing and with a big sky and constant wind adding (I'd imagine*) more to the feeling of expansiveness than of intimacy. Also, please expound on the 'subtle rhythms of golf' that it provides so well.
Put me on the spot. I'll try.
I'm quite sure Pacific Dunes occupies the smallest parcel of land of any of the Bandon Dunes courses. The green to tee walks are not only short and logical (perhaps with the exception of 11 to 12), but are beautiful in their own rite. The course is blessed with beautiful land to build a golf course; part choppy dunes and part sandstone plains out by the cliff. The stunted pine forest comes into play on a few holes as well.
But it's how Tom takes you around the property that gives its unbeatable appeal. Choppy, then flat, choppy, then flat, and choppy once again. Upwind for a couple holes, then downwind for a while. The course is quite hard; you have to play very good shots to reach greens in regulation. Each shot requires great care. No slop allowed. The requirement for precision, together with the ocean air, the senses are on high during the experience. Should you execute well, and maybe catch a couple of good breaks, you can get to the 10th tee, the great downhill par 3 into a quartering wind, and thus begins the critical part of the journey, a four hole stretch into the wind along the sandstone cliffs where you have to keep the ball low and under control to post a good score. The long uphill climb ends at the top of the course, the 13th green, hard along the cliff, framed by a 50 foot tall dune (which is experiencing a bit of fatigue I noticed recently).
In musical terms, Peter, I would suggest that the course experiences a crescendo here, and while the final few holes are wonderful, the intensity of the experience peaks here.
The course coasts downwind back towards the inland clubhouse. A short 3. A short 5 in the flats (not short without wind, though). A very choppy short 4; play it left and short off the tee to make par. One last long 3 into the wind, and a long, difficult and unusual par 5 in the dunes to the green below the clubhouse.
I find that Pacific Dunes yields more "rare play" shots than other courses. Every round or two, you find yourself standing awkwardly in the dunes, or turning your club around to hit it left-handed. Perhaps it is the nature of the land, the severity of the dunes, especially around the greensites, that creates the unusual play situations.
Finally, there are so many photogenic holes on the course. The look from the tee on 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11, 13 and 14 is just spectacular.
(I also find Bandon Trails to be this way, by the way...beautiful looks from the teebox)
I have to go now, but I hope that answers the question a bit. In summary, it looks great and it feels right.