I know that the routing of a golf course is a difficult endeavor with unlimited possibilities. I have read a bit about reading topo maps and that hasn't clicked. I also had a tour of DR2 before much had happened -- if the holes were just waiting to be found, they weren't going to be found by me. Bill Coore's (I think) description that you just walk the property as the land takes you may work for him, but it doesn't mean we would all find a golf course that way.
The question, "what makes a great routing" cannot be answered in a single sentence or paragraph. Heck, I know Forrest Richardson even wrote an entire book on the routing of the golf course (which I haven't read... yet).
But, I so often see statements on this site that the routing is good/bad/great/whatever. Based on what is anyone making this statement?
More often than not I think green-to-tee transitions are the determining factor for many on whether a routing is good.
I also often see statements that x routing was a missed opportunity. This is a very difficult statement to make, no? One with a lot of knowledge may be able to comment on the quality of the actual routing, but commenting on what it could have been?
Does routing encompass things like sequencing and flow?
What about interaction with the wind? I've always thought a constantly changing interaction with the wind is ideal, but that certainly would not meld with out-and-back routings.
One final question, can there be a great (or good) routing that cannot (comfortably) be walked? Aka a great cartball routing. I tend to think it's possible. Here's a quote from Tom Doak that is related: If you want to dismiss any course which cannot be walked, you're entitled to that point of view. You won't rule out very many of the best courses in the world that way, but you will ignore some very good work.
Any thoughts?