If nothing else this thread confirms Barney's opinion that Prairie Club suffers from an identifity crisis as precious few of the comments are about the golf course architecture.
Marsh's Pines course in no way plays second fiddle on the premises. The wind howled during my round and the course came to life.
Gratuitous windmill photograph of the short 3rd:
The course transitions into the pines at the 4th. This photo is from 80 yards out on the par four:
I wish I had taken a photograph from the tee of the par four 5th. The drive is from a narrow tree-lined shute over a sandy waste area to a blind but abundant fairway that turns abruptly right. This photo from the right side of the green shows the fun contouring:
This photo of the one-shot 6th is taken from slightly left of the tee - a visually stunning golf hole:
The 6th green from back left - I dig this chili:
The Snake River from behind and below the 16th green. An all world green site but unfortunately a routing dead end:
Headed home with the A/C and Radio Margaritaville cranked all the way up. This land is your land - this land is my land:
Arguably, for a student of golf course architecture, Prairie Club is a top ten destination in America as it offers an accessible, genuine sandhills golf experience over two top modern courses plus the bonus of Hanse's short course in a comfortable and hospitable environment. Not cheap, but rightly priced in relation to other resorts such as Pinehurst, Bandon Dunes, American Club or Pebble Beach to name a few. The golf might be a notch below those destinations, but what's a few Doak points among friends.
Bogey