Guys, I'm rethinking my reaction to this water feature.
It's now in play. Some finish work remains to be completed, but I've played the hole three times with the waterfall in place now, and I'm learning some nuances of how it affects play. Consider yesterday's 3-ball game...
The hole was playing 120 yards downhill to a front pin. Wind hurting off the left. My buddy, an annual club championship contender, hit a solid wedge that ballooned a touch in the wind. A sense of drama hangs in the air... before we see his ball land safely just over the water, a yard or so short of the green. He remarks "Well, I was definitely more nervous than I would've been last fall." So... win?
I'm up next. And I make my worst swing of the day and catch it heavy. I'm begging for the wind to keep it short of the water, but I know it's doomed. The ball comes down right in the middle of the new feature...
... bounces off a rock and shoots about 60 feet in the air...
... and lands safely on the front middle of the green. Then starts tracking toward the hole. I'm now asking it to go in! (It doesn't). I end up missing the 10 footer for what would've been an awfully memorable birdie. But as pars on 120 yard holes go... well, that one's pretty memorable.
Our third player hits a similar shot to mine. He also ricochets off a rock, but his ball comes backwards even short of the ground under repair. He nearly gets up-and-down on his way to a not-so-bad bogey.
So... I mean, compared to the old bunker, the waterfall is no more unsightly. It makes a pleasant sound. And it's MUCH more exciting! It's mostly rocky and shallow, and I hadn't considered the possibility that a ball hit into the hazard might only actually stay in the hazard some of the time.
You want quirk? Rub of the green? Scoring volatility? You might just need a rocky water feature.