Just a random thought, on unintended consequences. You can't log into this website without bumping into a thread, usually several, that praises the tree-cutting/tree-clearing fad that's sweeping the country, the notion being that all the best and most enlightened clubs and club memberships have finally managed to convince the dullards and the card and pencil set and the architectural dinosaurs among them that there is no evil worse than trees on a golf course, clogging up the vistas and robbing courses of the architectural greatness they once had (even if, as it sometimes seems, the original architects either left trees in place or had them planted and expected them to grow over time to add nuance and challenge to the design.) Now, that all may be true, the theory/fad may in fact often be the best thing, and yet it seems to me that an "S curve" without trees to frame/border it becomes instead, well, nothing more than an open rectangular field; and cross hazards and doglegs lose much of their meaning if pro and hacker alike can set up on the tee in whatever direction he wants and bomb away, comfortable in the fact that there'll be nary a tree to block or impede the ball's line of flight; and environmentally, all the space where trees once stood (that once needed no water or fertilizer), what do we think will fill that space now, not in an ideal Pinehurst #2 world, but in most places -- do we think it might be rough, or fairway maybe? And do we think most clubs will let the rough shrivel away to nothing and the fairway turn brown by not adding water and fertilizer? I don't know -- but sometimes it seems to me that we are moving today as quickly (and yes, thoughtlessly) as we claim the idiot club chairs of the past did when they quickly and thoughtlessly added tress to their courses, in part to combat the new golfing technologies that had everyone hitting the ball further.
Peter