This is becoming the sort of GCA thread that makes me just a bit uneasy, with its implied criticisms of the 95% of British golfers who seem to enjoy knocking the ball round their club's course and chatting with their friends, and who may not be over-fussed about specific architectural features. Without them there would be no golf at all.
To follow up Simon's thought, how many of us could actually tell (say) a Braid bunker from a Colt one? I certainly couldn't. We have our interests, and our historic expertise (in my case the distinctly niche area of amateur golf 1918-1970) but we have to be just a bit careful lest an occasional sense of superiority and 'we know best' pervades the discussions, howsoever well-intentioned they may be. Proper professional architectural engagement is another matter altogether.
It's all meant to be fun, after all. And different golfers extract fun in different ways.
It may surprise some that I agree.
My own criticisms on here are not towards the 95% but to
some of those in decision-making positions who (despite lack of knowledge or worse care) impose personal preferences onto those 95% and their golf course.
This "group-think echo-chamber" is a (friendly) place to express these concerns, to find a discussion, and/or discover that others might actually agree. Even better if others on here can educate, inform, and possibly change that opinion, no-one has all the right answers (least alone yours truly).
Being interested and passionate to learn (or seeking to protect what is precious) can be an extremely lonely place in some clubs, so this great site provides that opportunity to share thoughts with like-minded (not the same as having to agree) and engaged people.
This (Committee) issue has ever been thus (Dr. Mackenzie, Tom Simpson, and others wrote pointedly about this)...but it is more acute when the games' economics are in good health and money burns a hole in club pockets.
Keeping up with the Jones's (i.e. local or national competition) means clubs end up doing what might be considered to be homogenous, mediocre, or worse damaging work. Social media and TV golf only increases the pressure for highly visible changes, that become generic over time if ubiquitous.
I get the commercial imperative for both architects and constructors, but nothing wrong in asking/expecting them (as highly informed professionals) to do throughly researched work and to hold the line if there are unique or important features, strategy, character under threat. Respecting the work of those upon whose shoulders they now sit. Currently, such respect seems more obvious in the US, than it seems in the UK on some projects (regardless of ODG involved) so raising this may help the UK participants to raise their game?
We and a non-GCA interested golfer might both enjoy a particular course equally, and we might understand more clearly why, but that is not essential as we both can still enjoy it.
But it is encumbent upon us all to realise that, what we both enjoy was put in the ground by someone talented with thought and care, and that should be respected and protected for future golfers' enjoyment.
That does not mean no change, just that it should be far more carefully considered.
Then the 95% might enjoy it even more, even though they may not understand or care why...but I suspect they know far more than we might think but just want a quite life and to simply enjoy their golf, long may that be the case.
Finally, as Bobby Jones said:
"Every golfer worthy of the name should have some acquaintance with the principles of golf course design, not only for the betterment off the game, but for their own selfish enjoyment."