Stumbled across a picture on Facebook of Iona golf club located on an island off the island of Mull in Scotland in the Inner Hebrides.
Incredible remoteness, scenery and adventure-the fairways are sheep and cattle kept and the greens look more than a bit "a la natural" i.e. first cut of rough at many places.
What's the roughest conditions that you play normally?
What would be the roughest conditions you would enjoy traveling to?
and architects-what would be the roughest you would design, knowing the limitations of a project you had been referred to?
How many would be up for pasture golf? architects designing it?
I'll go first. I regularly play Goat Hill on Shelter island-at best barren cut, burnt weeds/dirt in the fairway with occasional splotches of real turf.
At worst, especially in the fall, long crabgrass which takes the fun out of bouncing the ball into greens that generally run away.
WE play summer rules always and chopping it out of hole is part of the charm on a running shot.
Tees at their best hard packed dirt, at their worst 4 inch crabgrass.
The greens run 4-6 but tend to putt quite true, with a lot of slope-making the differences between uphill and downhill very substantial.
I've played many raw and or sheep cut fairways and roughs in the UK/ireland (Mulranny,Westward Ho, Brora, Otway) but the greens are generally pretty good if not a bit slow-which I enjoy, especially combined with slope and good pins.
Askernish looks like a blast!
I will say I really enjoy a combo(Southerndown, Brora others) with a few mowers and sheep roaming keeping the rough tight and ball finding easy.
(In the hypocritical department)
Despite this, I was a bit put off by the poor fescue greens at Cabot Links this past summer. The lack of speed was fine but they were absolutely not true with the grass growing in a variety or directions and 5 footers were a crapshoot. The newer Cabot Cliffs greens had far less grass and putted better.
The high maintenance crowd (who are the market when you charge what they do-and are inundated by the white suited caddie tax) I was with was not amused but it hurts more when they are right-and I am pretty low maintenance.
Ironically, I never see poor greens in remote courses in Ireland/UK despite far smaller fees and no chemical inputs.
I also played an old muni stomping ground a few years ago that the greens had gotten so bad that putting was plinko, with grass being the hazard in the dirt shooting the ball offline where you could miss a 10 footer by 3-4 feet. That wasn't fun and we packed it in.
So in my case, regardless of roughness, the greens have to be puttable-i.e. no plinko. Slow, grainy fine. In fact I often putt quite well on temporaries that are merely fairways with a flag so I'm not that hard to please.
What say you on your demands/wish lists?
Architects?