James:
I just got back from playing The Loop this afternoon, with three friends ... ages 81, 45, and 11 ! Fun to see how it played for them all.
The course IS fully open, but to limit play this year, they are only letting people who stay at the resort play the course -- so, no more than 50 rounds a day, and usually less. That gives the superintendent some chance to catch up on the grow-in. They really shouldn't have opened until August or the first of September, but it's hard to turn people away who are standing there wanting to hand you cash, and of course they want people to talk up the course so there will be a full tee sheet next year!
The greens are as firm as any I've played and they are starting to get some speed ... I'd guess they were 10 on the Stimpmeter today. Fairways are still thin, but he's finally had some rain to help with the overseeding and fertilizing. He's been aiming to have it pure for a golf event we scheduled for mid-September, and I think it's going to be pretty good.
The intent is to alternate between Red and Black every day so that guests will stay and play it both ways around. They will change the hole locations every day, too, although this summer when play was light they sometimes would leave them in so that people could play to the same hole locations from the other direction.
The other course is very good, and most people would tell you to play it just as many times as you play The Loop. But if you are really interested in golf design, you're going to want to play The Loop a few times, as Rick Emerson suggests. There is a lot to figure out there, and it's doubly hard to remember the holes after one or two trips around because they are all different the next day! [So, it may score low on memorability for the GOLF DIGEST raters, but variety is off the charts!]