Patrick,
Yes, why exactly would Crump need a topo to help him route the course and CBM not need one?
Tillinghast told us that the land Crump found was covered in "bushes and scrub trees".
CBM, whose only previous routing experience was in open pastureland, told us that;
"However, there happened to be some 450 acres of land on Sebonac Neck, having a mile frontage on Peconic Bay and lying between Cold Spring Harbor and Bull's Head Bay. This property was little known and had never been surveyed. Everyone thought it was more or less worthless.
It abounded in bogs and swamps and was covered with an entanglement of bayberrry, huckleberry, blackberry, and other bushes and was infested by insects. The only way we could get over the ground was on ponies."
While we know that Crump took multiple friends out to walk the property with him, we also know that CBM's property was so overgrown that it was impenetrable on foot.
And what of the scrub trees? Well, rather than towering 40-70 foot trees all over the place, this is the definition I found...
scrub 2 (skrb)
n.
1. A straggly, stunted tree or shrub.
2. A growth or tract of stunted vegetation.
By the way Patrick, I do know your reading level is somewhere above 3rd grade, so I have to question if your misinterpretation of CBM's second paragraph on page 187 is intentional or not. Please tell me specifically where you find it says he routed the course after 2-3 days on horseback.
David and/or anyone else here...if you agree with Patrick that NGLA was routed in 2-3 days on horseback, please also feel free to offer your interpretation of where it says that, as well.
This is how it reads to me;
1) After getting turned down on property near the Canal, CBM looked at all 450 acres of the area of Alvord's holdings known as Sebonac Neck (which includes today's NGLA AND Sebonack Golf Clubs), which had never been surveyed (as it had never been subdivided prior) for real estate purposes. It was overgrown and unwalkable.
2) CBM and Jim Whigham spent 2-3 days riding over it, studying the contours of the ground.
3) Finally they determined it was what they wanted, provided they could get it reasonably.
4) Alvord's company agreed to sell CBM 205 acres (of the tract of 450 acres), and permitted them to locate the holes as to best serve CBM's purposes.
5) After gaining agreement, CBM and Whigham AGAIN studied the contours of the property earnestly for some unknown and unwritten portion of time, selecting those that would fit in naturally with the various classical holes CBM had in mind.
6) After making the determinations of the land they wanted to use for the course, again at some unknown time, CBM and Whigham staked out the specific land (205 acres) they wanted.
I do have to ask...we know that CBM had Raynor make him a contour map at some point prior to construction. If someone wanted to actually "study the contours earnestly", wouldn't this be the time one would have a contour map commissioned, especially on land with very dense, unwalkable growth?