Years ago, I was writing a story for a golf magazine about the Orchards Golf Club in South Hadley Mass. It's a fantastic Donald Ross layout that is owned by Mt. Holyoke College. It fell into pretty serious disrepair, but went through a huge renovation prior to hosting the Women's US Open.
Anyway, I was playing the course with a member and one of the pros, and midway through the round, as we approached a green that seemed to tie seamlessly into the land, they asked me if I noticed anything peculiar about its aesthetics. I didn't. Just thought it looked great.
The pro said, "No one who has ever played the course noticed anything unique about the greens ... and then Ben Crenshaw walked the property a few years back. And after seeing a few holes, he remarked that Donald Ross was very clever with the mounding around the greens. He was asked what he meant, and he was surprised no one had noticed. The mounding behind the greens mirrored perfectly the hills and mountains of the Berkshires in the background."
Once you noticed it, you couldn't miss it. It was that obvious. But without knowing about it, you had a sense that the surrounds felt totally in place without really understanding why.
I don't know how much of that story is true and how much is course mythology, but I sure hope it's true.