While I wasn't there for the entire project, I followed it closely and walked the ground for several days in May'08, when the course was about 75% of the way finished. The ground was very rough in spots, though significant areas had excellent turf. Numerous cattle trails, thousands of rabbit holes, and the like all were in evidence, though often not directly in main areas of play.
There are some marked differences between Askernish, MD and the Trumposity Course. The rare plants are the main concern that heightened the restrictive nature of options during construction at MD. There were also some low areas at the MD site, that held water for significant periods, having almost a a meadow-like quality to them that were off-limits. Trump's land has more exposed sands in dune systems than MD, and while unique, couldn't be defended as easily environmentally, especially withThe Donald's influence and the purported economic attractiveness some embraced.
Additionally, MD is new, from scratch, with even tighter constraints than anything out there. MD was created as a profit-driver for hotel and real estate ventures, while Askernish has been more organic in having the wonderful support of those that have given significantly, of their time or resources, to continue a noble endeavor of local origins.
That said, the Machrihanish Dunes project should be lauded and studied as a model for collaborative, environmentally responsible course development. Certainly other architects have taken a similar approach, but MD's restrictions would have frustrated all but the most persistent archies. It nearly drove those that succeeded in pulling it off batty!
Sadly, it has not gotten its due to the degree it should have, mostly due to missed opportunties to deliver the presentation properly for what it is and could become, rather than sounding the trumpets and then have partakers dissatisfied with the experience.
I hope both Askernish, Machrihanish Dunes, and other projects having their qualities become more prevalent in the coming years. The game, and golf's acceptance as a good steward by non-golfers, would benefit greatly from taking such a course.
Cheers,
Kris