It has been two-and-a-half years since I last visited my home away from home (a pleasant foursomes match with Mike Whitaker, Bill McBride and Joe Buehler) and only eight weeks until I am back there, so I have been thinking about it a lot.
One of the most incredible things is that the land - flattish, but constantly rippling and rising and falling regularly by two-to-five feet - is perfect for greens that are so intriguing through land alone that they don't need to be bunkered.
Half the greens unbunkered, and those holes probably include 6-7 of the best 10 on the course.
Riddle me this: is there a golf course on the face of planet Earth better than Royal Cinque Ports - even comparable to the quality of "the hilliest flat links in golf" - that has as many, or more, bunkerless greens.
For those who might want to suggest a rival: the number to match or beat is
nine bunkerless greens (1, 3, 4, 6, 10, 15, 16, 17, 18).