This subject fascinates me. It is also very difficult for me to collate my thoughts on it as I find it difficult to describe, so I hope you have some patience with my ramblings below. It’s about the feelings I get when I play a course that makes great use of space.
I don’t like being told how to play. I don’t like aiming bunkers, framing features, mowing lines that define and direct me around. Seems to me like good use of space is more about what you leave out then how cleverly you leave your mark.
I like Peter’s post about the ghost notes. How is that possible; how can a performer pull that off and have it praised (or not noticed) instead of criticized as being lazy for not finishing? I believe he brings the audience inside the music. They are no longer just listening, analyzing note quality or measuring progressions, they are involved. They are part of it, and a talented performer lets them finish the piece; he adds no more then necessary.
In golf design, I see few architects who try and involve the golfer. They want him to play golf, not immerse him within the course. So they direct him, challenge his execution, punish him for his failures, and show him some pretty scenes along the way. We dazzle them with impeccable maintenance, and fast greens, but we don’t try to bring him inside the course. Golf by numbers.
We are in the dark ages of course renovation. We alter our courses for all the wrong reasons; ratings, tournaments, keeping up with the Jones’. We use data, shot link, distances, % of slope and stimpmeters, distribution uniformity and sand specs, it can all be justified. But at what price? Is anyone trying to bring the golfer inside the course? I don’t think so. We guide him around, define the targets, give him nice grass, and hope he doesn’t get bored.
St Andrews Old had the best use of space I’ve ever seen. Most of it is still there, but the cat is out of the bag. The changes will all be based on data, for sure. What else could you use as the man in charge of the work doesn’t play golf? We know he’s not going to get lost within the course; he’s going to be directed by shot link data and scoring averages, distances carried, and percentage of slope.
Maybe I’m the only guy who has felt what its like to be immersed in a golf course. To lose track of score, hole number, and time; to just get so sucked in as to be completely in the moment. That has happened to me a few times. I guess for some it only happens when they are striking it great. Their great days on the course happen when they play well, and we all want to play well so I get that. For me, the special days are when the course sucked me in. When I felt like I was a part of it instead of trying to beat it. I’ve felt that at The Old Course and I’ve felt it at a few other courses as well. I believe the use of “empty” uncluttered space has a lot to do with immersion. Am I alone?