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GolfClubAtlas.com => Golf Course Architecture => Topic started by: Mark_Fine on April 17, 2022, 07:54:05 PM

Title: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 17, 2022, 07:54:05 PM
A 350 yard drive into rough or even a bunker these days doesn’t scare or even hinder the bombers - but a tree in their way will.  You can’t over power a course/design like Harbour Town. Maybe it will be trees that save us from 8500 yard golf courses.  Bunkers in the sky :)
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Jim_Coleman on April 17, 2022, 09:42:00 PM
   We can only hope! Thinning is to be encouraged; deforestation not.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 18, 2022, 07:39:12 AM
Jim,
I admit I have taken down A LOT of trees on most of my projects but the majority of the them were not planted by golf architects.  Many were the wrong species or planted in poor locations or for the wrong reasons.  On certain courses, trees can play an important role both aesthetically and strategically.  Yes they do have a limited lifetime but some can last for a very long time.  Golf has become a much more aerial game, why not employ more aerial hazards? 
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Sean_A on April 19, 2022, 04:55:59 AM
The pendulum has barely been moved. Judging the state of architecture by looking at storied and monied clubs offers but a glimpse of reality. So many courses need tree work, more than ever will properly tackle the issue. No, I think we need to allow the pendulum to continue rising before its released. In truth, the pendulum shouldn't ever be released. That's why we have such a problem with trees!

Ciao
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 19, 2022, 07:14:48 AM
So Sean, what happens first, the pendulum starts to swing back or 8500 - 9000 yard golf courses become more common?  You could grow rough six inches high as a deterrent but no likes searching for lost balls.  Bunkers aren’t hazards anymore for good players (you don’t like them either).  Angles don’t matter much with gap wedges in hand.  There is some strategic merit on certain courses in trees.  If you played a course like Harbour Town as one example you would see that. 


We all agree many courses have had poorly planned tree planting programs.  But that doesn’t mean clear cutting is the best answer. 
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Joe Hancock on April 19, 2022, 07:24:31 AM
How many courses took the action of “clear cutting”? Present the answer first as a whole number, then as a percentage of existing courses. Thank you.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Sean_A on April 19, 2022, 07:31:12 AM
So Sean, what happens first, the pendulum starts to swing back or 8500 - 9000 yard golf courses become more common?  You could grow rough six inches high as a deterrent but no likes searching for lost balls.  Bunkers aren’t hazards anymore for good players (you don’t like them either).  Angles don’t matter much with gap wedges in hand.  There is some strategic merit on certain courses in trees.  If you played a course like Harbour Town as one example you would see that. 


We all agree many courses have had poorly planned tree planting programs.  But that doesn’t mean clear cutting is the best answer.

I never advocated clear cutting? I don't know of anybody who does advocate clear cutting. I advocate for the right trees in the right location and the right number. If my experience is remotely representative, I suspect thousands of courses are over-treed.  There is a long way to go with trees.

Ciao
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Jay Mickle on April 19, 2022, 07:44:52 AM
The other day I truly swung back the pendulum and played a round of gutty golf with pre 1905 smooth face clubs. The lighter aerodynamically challenged ball was far more affected by wind and the vagaries of uniformity. A sweet spot was truly a sweet spot and judging spin was irrelevant. A 275 yard hole was a strong par four, drivable by no one.
We played the course from the shortest set of tees and found the architecture was much more relevant in club and shot selection. Strategy trumped distance making the whole round great fun. With all of the technological advances a game of gutty golf is still a great game. Makes one wonder if we have truly improved the game with polymer balls, titanium/ceramic/graphite clubs and longer courses.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 19, 2022, 07:52:07 AM
Maybe we are saying the same thing.  Trees can and should have a place on certain golf courses.  My point is more in defense of a course like Harbour Town where most who don’t care for it complain about the trees.  I get the impression that some would get rid of all the trees on most courses if they had their way.  My point it that doing so is not necessarily a smart solution. 


Colt was one of the first to provide tree planting recommendations for his golf courses so future stewards of his designs would know what he had in mind.  He obviously advocated for trees, knew they would play a role in his designs, or wouldn’t have bothered.  If he saw where and how far golfers hit the ball these days my guess is he would advocate for more.  He sure wouldn’t advocate for 8500 yard courses and never planned or envisioned that for his courses.   



Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Thomas Dai on April 19, 2022, 07:59:33 AM
The other day I truly swung back the pendulum and played a round of gutty golf with pre 1905 smooth face clubs. The lighter aerodynamically challenged ball was far more affected by wind and the vagaries of uniformity. A sweet spot was truly a sweet spot and judging spin was irrelevant. A 275 yard hole was a strong par four, drivable by no one.
We played the course from the shortest set of tees and found the architecture was much more relevant in club and shot selection. Strategy trumped distance making the whole round great fun. With all of the technological advances a game of gutty golf is still a great game. Makes one wonder if we have truly improved the game with polymer balls, titanium/ceramic/graphite clubs and longer courses.
Nice post. Well said.
Atb
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Paul Jones on April 19, 2022, 08:27:32 AM
PGA Tour could setup a course like Pine Valley with no rakes.  Then the bunkers might scare the players.  CBM respond to a question about preparing bunkers for a tournament that he was going to run cows through the bunkers instead.  I am paraphrasing...
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Paul Jones on April 19, 2022, 08:30:13 AM
On a separate note... the PGA Tour could also ban tees as a condition of competition.  That would slow down how far the pros hit the golf ball off the tee.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Paul Jones on April 19, 2022, 08:38:16 AM
Sorry, ADD is kicking in this morning and my thoughts are all over the place....


Let's take a look at 2 of the more famous trees that have died:


-Augusta Natl Eisenhower Tree - died but they never replaced as the scores did not change on the hole.


-Pepple Beach 18th Tree - it died but was replaced, not sure if they studied the difference in scores on that hole while the tree was gone.


I think both courses made the right decision. 
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: V. Kmetz on April 19, 2022, 08:59:52 AM
How many courses took the action of “clear cutting”? Present the answer first as a whole number, then as a percentage of existing courses. Thank you.


Joe...that's being a stickler for the language; you understood the expression.  While it can't satisfy Webster on "clear cut" I could name 15-20 courses off the top of my head, from the grand to the plain, in the Met that have now ranged out of bounds with their tree removal programs, to the extent you might as well have gone and got rid of the other 12% that were left.   Century, perhaps the platinum standard for premium green parkland course  was desecrated. There's hardly 100 sq feet of continuous shade to be found at WF... it's gone too far.  Most of these are honest parkland courses, and there's a reason for that established term.


It's an editorial and unsolicited, but my up close opinion is that its more supers are the ones driving this past moderate good sense (sorely needed 30 years ago) , we and the USGA green section helped them win hearts and minds, because tree removal can be justified if you just cry "turf"...a denuded course is easier for them to maintain in all seasons...allows them to maintain a posture of pro-activity... allows them to build in larger budgets.  Imo, there's too many who don't give two bits about the enjoyment of the course or the design/width theories of trees or the correct character of the property upon which the course lays... those types, which show up with greater frequency these days, only give a fig about how any of it results in the next contract, for more money and more stuff on their CV.  And more of those are driving this effective "clear-cut" of the courses in their charge...
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Paul Jones on April 19, 2022, 09:12:33 AM
The other day I truly swung back the pendulum and played a round of gutty golf with pre 1905 smooth face clubs. The lighter aerodynamically challenged ball was far more affected by wind and the vagaries of uniformity. A sweet spot was truly a sweet spot and judging spin was irrelevant. A 275 yard hole was a strong par four, drivable by no one.
We played the course from the shortest set of tees and found the architecture was much more relevant in club and shot selection. Strategy trumped distance making the whole round great fun. With all of the technological advances a game of gutty golf is still a great game. Makes one wonder if we have truly improved the game with polymer balls, titanium/ceramic/graphite clubs and longer courses.


Jay,


If you ask most golfers at the local club, they just want to hit the ball further. I think people that enjoy golf architecture, love strategy and find that part of golf fun.  However, most other golfers just want to hit the ball further and that is part of the appeal of Top Golf.  All the manufacturers sell clubs by telling you the news ones go further - according to all the marketing, we all should be hitting drivers 400+ yards since we gain 10 yards with every new driver  :) .
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Cal Carlisle on April 19, 2022, 09:40:32 AM
How many courses took the action of “clear cutting”? Present the answer first as a whole number, then as a percentage of existing courses. Thank you.


Joe...that's being a stickler for the language; you understood the expression.  While it can't satisfy Webster on "clear cut" I could name 15-20 courses off the top of my head, from the grand to the plain, in the Met that have now ranged out of bounds with their tree removal programs, to the extent you might as well have gone and got rid of the other 12% that were left.   Century, perhaps the platinum standard for premium green parkland course  was desecrated. There's hardly 100 sq feet of continuous shade to be found at WF... it's gone too far.  Most of these are honest parkland courses, and there's a reason for that established term.


It's an editorial and unsolicited, but my up close opinion is that its more supers are the ones driving this past moderate good sense (sorely needed 30 years ago) , we and the USGA green section helped them win hearts and minds, because tree removal can be justified if you just cry "turf"...a denuded course is easier for them to maintain in all seasons...allows them to maintain a posture of pro-activity... allows them to build in larger budgets.  Imo, there's too many who don't give two bits about the enjoyment of the course or the design/width theories of trees or the correct character of the property upon which the course lays... those types, which show up with greater frequency these days, only give a fig about how any of it results in the next contract, for more money and more stuff on their CV.  And more of those are driving this effective "clear-cut" of the courses in their charge...


Wow, you really hold the role of golf course superintendent in high esteem.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Joe Hancock on April 19, 2022, 09:46:09 AM
How many courses took the action of “clear cutting”? Present the answer first as a whole number, then as a percentage of existing courses. Thank you.


Joe...that's being a stickler for the language; you understood the expression.  While it can't satisfy Webster on "clear cut" I could name 15-20 courses off the top of my head, from the grand to the plain, in the Met that have now ranged out of bounds with their tree removal programs, to the extent you might as well have gone and got rid of the other 12% that were left.   Century, perhaps the platinum standard for premium green parkland course  was desecrated. There's hardly 100 sq feet of continuous shade to be found at WF... it's gone too far.  Most of these are honest parkland courses, and there's a reason for that established term.


It's an editorial and unsolicited, but my up close opinion is that its more supers are the ones driving this past moderate good sense (sorely needed 30 years ago) , we and the USGA green section helped them win hearts and minds, because tree removal can be justified if you just cry "turf"...a denuded course is easier for them to maintain in all seasons...allows them to maintain a posture of pro-activity... allows them to build in larger budgets.  Imo, there's too many who don't give two bits about the enjoyment of the course or the design/width theories of trees or the correct character of the property upon which the course lays... those types, which show up with greater frequency these days, only give a fig about how any of it results in the next contract, for more money and more stuff on their CV.  And more of those are driving this effective "clear-cut" of the courses in their charge...


I haven’t been to Winged Foot in a couple years. And, I’m not sure how much to let you pull my chain. 100 square feet of shade wouldn’t even be the total of one tree’s worth of shade at WF. I’m also sure there’s still hundreds of trees still on each of the golf courses, but like I said, I haven’t been there in a couple years.


I believe good architects, along with good superintendents and good club leadership make good decisions concerning trees. Is there those who go rogue? Probably, but they’re not swinging any pendulums.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 19, 2022, 09:55:27 AM
Superintendents definitely play a major role in tree removals.  Most (chime in supers if you disagree) would like almost every tree removed from their golf courses.  In some ways I can’t blame them but many would also like wall to wall cart paths or no carts at all.  They knew when they signed up as supers they were taking on one of if not the hardest job in golf.  Trees are part of that challenge and they (most do) need to embrace it. 


The Eisenhower tree was no longer in play for those guys today.  The one at Pebble surely is. 


V. Kemtz,
Good post!
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Jim_Coleman on April 19, 2022, 09:56:22 AM
   When trees are cut down to the point where accurate driving is no longer relevant, a club has gone too far. That is, unless one believes that, no matter how wayward the drive, one should always have a direct shot to the green.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Joe Hancock on April 19, 2022, 10:08:08 AM
   When trees are cut down to the point where accurate driving is no longer relevant, a club has gone too far. That is, unless one believes that, no matter how wayward the drive, one should always have a direct shot to the green.


I don’t believe this gives some architects, past and present, enough credit for designing greens that dictate favorable vs. unfavorable angles of approach. Just because there’s a direct shot at the green doesn’t mean it’s the right choice. Of course, agronomics and wind, etc. all play into this.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 19, 2022, 10:30:12 AM
Joe,
I agree but angles don’t matter with gap wedges in hand.  I played a course the other day and watched my opponent play down the neighboring fairway cutting off the dogleg. He hit the ball 330 yards and had a terrible angle but still hit a flip wedge to 10 feet and made the putt.  The architect never envisioned the hole to be played that way.  One or two trees properly placed might avoid that option.  We saw players do the same at Riviera if I am not mistaken.  As the ball goes farther we will see more and more of this.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Jeff_Brauer on April 19, 2022, 11:24:07 AM
I just got off a phone call where tree mitigation (In supposedly low regulation Texas) was going to cost over $100K, and several thousand per tree.  I think that will be a bigger issue in architecture than what happens at top line courses in major tournaments......
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Tommy Williamsen on April 19, 2022, 11:56:02 AM
Sorry, ADD is kicking in this morning and my thoughts are all over the place....


Let's take a look at 2 of the more famous trees that have died:


-Augusta Natl Eisenhower Tree - died but they never replaced as the scores did not change on the hole.




I wonder if the scores changed for regular member play.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: V. Kmetz on April 19, 2022, 12:20:27 PM

Wow, you really hold the role of golf course superintendent in high esteem.

Not at all, the sarcasm is incorrect; my father was super's mechanic long ago; I played in a super's shop as a youngster, some of the most durable friendships in 41 years of club service I've made are with supers...even supers who are doing this... have never met an honest incompetent...can't say enough good things about their care of the playing grounds, and many many times, their inputs here... It's because of those close relationships, I feel justified in saying this. However, that is not to say there are two or three out and out pricks... who I hope lose their greens in their pompous hubris.

But removals have, and are now going, too far, obliterating trees that have no little or no impact on any legitimate aspect of sunlight windows or turf growth, air flow, playing width or angles, even aesthetic views, etc...and in fact are now making the wholesale decisions on trees that either were extant at founding OR were part of the natural development of a hole's long standing character... as if they re the same as a stand of ill conceived overgrown once-decorative, conifers planted in the 70s by a green site.

I'm not making a charge of corruption or thinking of all supers, just stating that a sizable contingent in my orbit have inured the organizational/careerist trait following the path of least resistance in revolving contract posts (and for the other reasons I listed in previous post). Since most hearts and minds were won on the board and committee level 10-15 years ago, they now have near cart blanche... one of those friend-supers (it felt too stupid to write "super friends") winks at me when I ask about the 20 notable new tear downs in the off season..."storm damage!" and we laugh...ha ha ha.

Joe there was hyperbole...but I'm not pulling your chain, while I still visit for camaraderie, up until 3 years ago, I was/been out there caddying, there's no fucking respite from the sun... almost an absence of visual grace from casting shadows...no trickery of air pockets whistling through a nearby grove... little or no majestic frames.  Up until about 2012... I personally think the tree program had met the necessary ends, given the enormous co-programs of drainage and Hanses restoration work.  The bottom line is that photo archives reveal that WF had significant stands of trees in its first iteration and almost none of the ones available to be seen in 1920s photos are there anymore.  I'd look also at the 1925-26 aerials and measure it up to the most recent one.

And Century is destroyed as an experience comparable to what it was and the reverence its old presentation once commanded. It's still a fine golf course, but its incongruous with its former ken as a singular, treasured, precious experience.

But c'mon, supers own up... you would prefer not green and not plush and you don't want your boards thinking green and plush because it's more work/expectations (expectations you might fall short of)  for you, or because you know better...?


Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: M. Shea Sweeney on April 19, 2022, 04:09:44 PM




And Century is destroyed as an experience comparable to what it was and the reverence its old presentation once commanded. It's still a fine golf course, but its incongruous with its former ken as a singular, treasured, precious experience.


Kmetz
Century is destroyed? Maybe you can expand on this because seems to me Century is a fabulous golf course.
i've played several tournaments at Century and have played recreationally often through the years.
I remember several years ago being on the right edge in the fairway on #10, and having long limbs hanging into the fairway and blocking my line to a hole location that was back left.



Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Jim_Coleman on April 19, 2022, 04:58:54 PM
    Joe: Yes, it’s almost always better to be in the fairway than to the side. And yes, the angle into the green from the side is usually (but not always) worse than from the fairway.  But a direct shot from the side is always better than a shot that has to deal with an obstruction.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Ira Fishman on April 19, 2022, 06:09:03 PM
I have given a lot of thought to the frequent topic of trees on this site because I am not an architect, superintendent, restoration expert, or particularly good golfer. I have come to the hypothesis that this is not a difficult problem to solve:


1. If the tree or trees were there when the course was designed and the architect used them to influence the line of play and/or the wind patterns, leave them in place. If they have grown too large, prune them back.


2. If the tree or trees are not there from the beginning for those purposes and interfere with turf health, remove them or prune them back.


Sure, there may be a tree or trees that were put there after the original design for “strategic” reasons, but they probably are few and far between and would need to fit squarely and properly in point one.


Ira

Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: V. Kmetz on April 19, 2022, 07:52:55 PM

Kmetz
Century is destroyed? Maybe you can expand on this because seems to me Century is a fabulous golf course.
i've played several tournaments at Century and have played recreationally often through the years.
I remember several years ago being on the right edge in the fairway on #10, and having long limbs hanging into the fairway and blocking my line to a hole location that was back left.


Sweeney,
Read closer...still a fine course, destroyed/defaced as the experience it was when earned its reputation.  I can hardly believe your playing account/bio there if you too don't recall it as the plushest, greenest, most manicured course in the Met, and known precisely in that reputational space.  By contrast, my people go back to 1964 there; I grew up on Anderson Hill Road, caddying at the Purchase clubs, and playing Century most summer Mondays in the 1980s and 1990s.  Destroyed as an experience...Still...congratulations, you probably have a shot now there on #10.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: M. Shea Sweeney on April 19, 2022, 10:57:25 PM

Kmetz
Century is destroyed? Maybe you can expand on this because seems to me Century is a fabulous golf course.
i've played several tournaments at Century and have played recreationally often through the years.
I remember several years ago being on the right edge in the fairway on #10, and having long limbs hanging into the fairway and blocking my line to a hole location that was back left.


Sweeney,
Read closer...still a fine course, destroyed/defaced as the experience it was when earned its reputation.  I can hardly believe your playing account/bio there if you too don't recall it as the plushest, greenest, most manicured course in the Met, and known precisely in that reputational space.  By contrast, my people go back to 1964 there; I grew up on Anderson Hill Road, caddying at the Purchase clubs, and playing Century most summer Mondays in the 1980s and 1990s.  Destroyed as an experience...Still...congratulations, you probably have a shot now there on #10.
Kmetz,
OK-
So you are saying that the tree removal has impacted the condition and subsequently the way you feel when you are there compared to years past?
Century has been one of the top clubs in the Section forever, Hogan worked there- Darrell Kestner was an assistant there and still tells stories of how very good the club was to him. It makes complete sense that back in the day they were leaders in turf grass.


Century seems to be in fine fine condition- agronomy and architecture.
We played a 3 Day event there in 2020 fall, and it was fiery, fast, and perfect- rough was thick too- you couldn't just hit it wherever you wanted to.
I love the 10th hole- great tee ball near that putting green that usually has players warming up and hanging around- birdie opportunity with a solid drive- but you can't fall asleep on the approach or you looking at a tough up and in. The hole rides the land beautifully down the hill before turning back around for 11.


I reference the 10th because I distinctly remember thinking to myself this place could use a little trimming. I have definitely bogeyed the hole in my time there, but I've also made a few birds.




Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: V. Kmetz on April 20, 2022, 05:24:46 PM
Kmetz,
OK-
So you are saying that the tree removal has impacted the condition and subsequently the way you feel when you are there compared to years past?  No...I'm speaking to the instant obliteration of perhaps one of America's finest parkland course venues as an integrated singular "experience", built and earning a singular reputation for 7/8ths of existence in and of that parkland character -- which is verdant greens, few browns, stately rows of old growth trees, with landmark framing and conveying an honest patina of age and permanence. The course, the route...many of the shots have not been changed or ruined...but that's all there is now...course, naked, without definition, a ground level map... course looks the same in the morning, as it does at dusk, no shady respites, no tree-deflected wind rushes...naked and with homogenous character.  That's fine, even desirable for a great deal of golf land...but the place isn't the Mersey or the North Sea, nor a sandy beach top or rolling midlands... It was and is a very fine course, but it used to be that AND have this singular, platinum-standard character, to which you're being obtuse if you advertise long familiarity with this course and do not acknowledge in front of posters here.
 
Century has been one of the top clubs in the Section forever, Hogan worked there- Darrell Kestner was an assistant there and still tells stories of how very good the club was to him. It makes complete sense that back in the day they were leaders in turf grass.

Misconstrual upon misconstrual; you broadcast as if I'm saying the course or (please retract) the club is no longer good, and I'm not saying that at all.  And what the hell does Hogan and Kestner have to do with any of it?  You forgot to name-drop JC Snead and of more recent vintage, Frankie Bensel.

Century seems to be in fine fine condition- agronomy and architecture.
We played a 3 Day event there in 2020 fall, and it was fiery, fast, and perfect- rough was thick too- you couldn't just hit it wherever you wanted to.
I love the 10th hole- great tee ball near that putting green that usually has players warming up and hanging around- birdie opportunity with a solid drive- but you can't fall asleep on the approach or you looking at a tough up and in. The hole rides the land beautifully down the hill before turning back around for 11.

I reference the 10th because I distinctly remember thinking to myself this place could use a little trimming. I have definitely bogeyed the hole in my time there, but I've also made a few birds.


I don't know what any of the last graphs have to do with anything, but if you think that irksome branch on #10 from some time back, and what's happened there now, is representative of a "little trimming"... then I'm addressing a champion blind golfer, and my deep apologies; it's a miracle you're on the internet.

Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: M. Shea Sweeney on April 20, 2022, 08:41:42 PM
Kmetz,
OK-
So you are saying that the tree removal has impacted the condition and subsequently the way you feel when you are there compared to years past?  No...I'm speaking to the instant obliteration of perhaps one of America's finest parkland course venues as an integrated singular "experience", built and earning a singular reputation for 7/8ths of existence in and of that parkland character -- which is verdant greens, few browns, stately rows of old growth trees, with landmark framing and conveying an honest patina of age and permanence. The course, the route...many of the shots have not been changed or ruined...but that's all there is now...course, naked, without definition, a ground level map... course looks the same in the morning, as it does at dusk, no shady respites, no tree-deflected wind rushes...naked and with homogenous character.  That's fine, even desirable for a great deal of golf land...but the place isn't the Mersey or the North Sea, nor a sandy beach top or rolling midlands... It was and is a very fine course, but it used to be that AND have this singular, platinum-standard character, to which you're being obtuse if you advertise long familiarity with this course and do not acknowledge in front of posters here.
 
Century has been one of the top clubs in the Section forever, Hogan worked there- Darrell Kestner was an assistant there and still tells stories of how very good the club was to him. It makes complete sense that back in the day they were leaders in turf grass.

Misconstrual upon misconstrual; you broadcast as if I'm saying the course or (please retract) the club is no longer good, and I'm not saying that at all.  And what the hell does Hogan and Kestner have to do with any of it?  You forgot to name-drop JC Snead and of more recent vintage, Frankie Bensel.

Century seems to be in fine fine condition- agronomy and architecture.
We played a 3 Day event there in 2020 fall, and it was fiery, fast, and perfect- rough was thick too- you couldn't just hit it wherever you wanted to.
I love the 10th hole- great tee ball near that putting green that usually has players warming up and hanging around- birdie opportunity with a solid drive- but you can't fall asleep on the approach or you looking at a tough up and in. The hole rides the land beautifully down the hill before turning back around for 11.

I reference the 10th because I distinctly remember thinking to myself this place could use a little trimming. I have definitely bogeyed the hole in my time there, but I've also made a few birds.


I don't know what any of the last graphs have to do with anything, but if you think that irksome branch on #10 from some time back, and what's happened there now, is representative of a "little trimming"... then I'm addressing a champion blind golfer, and my deep apologies; it's a miracle you're on the internet.



Kmetz
That's a wonderful explanation re the parkland nature of Century, thank you.
It's a great course, and I've always felt it to be underrated in the section.

Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Ira Fishman on April 20, 2022, 09:06:02 PM
VK,


Not to interrupt the back and forth, but we played the first 11 holes of Century last fall (the skies opened unfortunately). Your comments about the trees really made me think because I now can see where they might make a really good course even better. Do you have any photos from yesteryear?


Ira
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 20, 2022, 10:23:31 PM
There are still a lot of courses that have too many trees, too many of the wrong kinds, and too many planted in the wrong places.  But trees do have a place in this game and on many golf courses and as is often the case overzealous tree haters can go overboard and take out too many.  It is hard to replace a large mature tree once it is gone. 


I once recommended to a club, take out every other pine tree and after that keep taking out every other one.  For that course it made sense and a lot were removed but for some courses, certain trees can be advantageous to remain, sometimes even if they are not the ideal specimen.  I do believe trees can play an important role going forward and as stated might help us (in certain cases) avoid longer and longer golf holes/courses. 


Harbour Town has stood the test of time for the best golfers in the world and is barely 7000 yards long.  Trees are a major part of the reason.  There are courses we all could name closer to 8000 yards that play like chip and putt for them (they don’t have any/many trees).
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Sean_A on April 21, 2022, 01:35:11 AM
There are still a lot of courses that have too many trees, too many of the wrong kinds, and too many planted in the wrong places.

So we do agree. Now it's a matter of degree. That admission took an unnecessary number of posts. We need to decide whether golf courses exist to play golf or as a place to plant trees. We have seen what happens when trees are permitted to run wild...not good for golf or grass. IMO the issue will never be completely solved because too many places ignored proper tree management for far too long. Now, a great number of places cannot or will not afford the cost of playing catch-up. That is a shame because I routinely see  courses that would be more enjoyable, better conditioned for less money and prettier with far less trees. But hey, the narrative is tree haters have clear cut the world's courses because an extremely small number of clubs have gone down this route. It's a preposterous argument. There are very few times I say to myself that what this hole needs is x number of trees to improve its playability, interest and aesthetics. I usually think of trees as a screen or noise block. If we could think of trees in the way that was originally intended for parks, hence the name parkland course, golf would be better off.

Ciao
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Thomas Dai on April 21, 2022, 04:02:53 AM
Would seem like an appropriate moment to post a link to Joe Sponcia’s GCA ‘In my opinion’ tree piece from 2016 -
https://golfclubatlas.com/in-my-opinion/sponcia-joe-trees-on-the-golf-course-a-common-sense-approach/ (https://golfclubatlas.com/in-my-opinion/sponcia-joe-trees-on-the-golf-course-a-common-sense-approach/)
Atb
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 21, 2022, 07:30:57 AM
Sean,
In my second post I admitted I have taken down A LOT of trees on nearly every project.  On my last two projects alone the total is well over 500 probably closer to a thousand (but we don’t like to count)  ;)   


It is all about the degree to which they are managed and removed. 


Thomas,
That is a great article and I could have written it myself.  I have several “tree” presentations that I use often with committees to talk about trees as they are without question the most challenging aspect of golf course restoration/renovation as there is so much emotion surrounding them.  It is very hard to get a club to take down a full grown healthy tree.  Even harder to take down one with a plaque on it  :)


The point of this thread is that as I watch certain courses take down trees (which they probably should) I watch golfers take lines of play that architects never had envisioned.  As an example, for safety purposes, one course instituted “internal aerial” out of bounds so if your ball passes in that air space and returns back in play it is still deemed out of bounds.  They don’t want anyone flying golf balls over other golfers heads which is more common on parallel or dog leg holes with no trees. 


I am just saying more Architects are going to or at least should think a bit more about how trees might be used as a design tool going forward.  Pete Dye used them often very successfully on many of his designs (not just Harbour Town).  And I wouldn’t describe those courses as arboretums (though there are still many courses out there that have become tree nurseries).  Sensible tree management “and tree use” is good for the game.  That is what this thread was meant to have us think about.  Maybe we will not only remove trees but we will plant some as well  ;)
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Ira Fishman on April 21, 2022, 07:44:35 AM
I have given a lot of thought to the frequent topic of trees on this site because I am not an architect, superintendent, restoration expert, or particularly good golfer. I have come to the hypothesis that this is not a difficult problem to solve:


1. If the tree or trees were there when the course was designed and the architect used them to influence the line of play and/or the wind patterns, leave them in place. If they have grown too large, prune them back.


2. If the tree or trees are not there from the beginning for those purposes and interfere with turf health, remove them or prune them back.


Sure, there may be a tree or trees that were put there after the original design for “strategic” reasons, but they probably are few and far between and would need to fit squarely and properly in point one.


Ira


Mark’s post reminded me to add a third principle:


If the tree(s) are there for legitimate safety reasons, leave them there but at least prune them back when possible.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Jim_Coleman on April 21, 2022, 07:50:52 AM
   I think an important lesson from this thread is that major tree removal should not be undertaken without the advice of a trusted architect. If tree removal is contemplated that will change the way a course  will look or play, get an architect first. If the before and after pictures are going to be striking, get an architect first. If all you’re doing is general pruning and removing seriously unhealthy trees, the super can probably be trusted. But if the super is taking before and after pictures for his resume, beware. The pictures may be gorgeous, but an architect should have been involved.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: V. Kmetz on April 21, 2022, 10:02:40 AM
VK,

Not to interrupt the back and forth, but we played the first 11 holes of Century last fall (the skies opened unfortunately). Your comments about the trees really made me think because I now can see where they might make a really good course even better. Do you have any photos from yesteryear?

Ira


Not at all Ira, I'm satisfied the point is made and MS' probe helped me make it...Firstly, pictures... I can only hope your or my next visit inside the clubhouse would yield something; I have no independent pictures from its platinum days... You could get the roughest "sense" of it if you GoogleEarthed it in the historical viewer, or went into those Westchester County Aerials that every architect references.


And I would not say "a good course even better"...but "a good course made singular"... It's hard to convey an aesthetic feeling... that Century felt "old and kingly and permanent"...but that's how I'm left to convey it.  Those big thick specimen trees of age were so very grand, and they so often created a indeed grand boulevard to the the green target and its various interests.  The shade they cast was thick and cool in the summer heat...when even the lightest wind blew this way and that, the leaves top and undersides gave differing green hues to the frame of the golf hole...they made a cloudy day more leaden, but quiet; they made a rainy day more glum; but more private. And of course they cast dark shadows and obscured secret dangers; and made alleys of sunshine, opening and closing reveals of bright altars and peeks of far vistas.  Now it's a large, pretty, hillside field, with a cough of dotted trees and a sturdy course upon it. So not better or worse...just not singular as the previous description would argue.


As a matter of golf, Century has a number of blind, partially blind, hidden landing area tee shots (5, 6, 8, 14, 15) and those big old trees well in the rough provided another compass point, but also a vexation as triangulations were different from various tees and sides of tees to such trees.  Yes roots of these big ol suckers could play a capricious role in what you got if you got that, but it was some part of Century's character of rigor...indeed look at Hogan, Kestner, JC Snead, Frank Bensel, to which I'll add Dick Siderowf and you have the entire panoply of elite golf success from hall of fame legend to the national to the regional to the local to the top amateur ranks.  Those guys prospered at and with and playing Century in their careers, and they all played it in the era when it was this grander, singular thing...when it was a parkland course.


Surely, overgrowth and over planting existed, was needlessly encroaching, and like so many courses, needed addressing, but Century is denuded and naked now...and 3-4 years later, I don't see any compensatory, well curated or not, new plantings sprouting up...just to get some underpants back on, I should think.



Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Ira Fishman on April 21, 2022, 10:13:18 AM
VK,


Such a well stated perspective that I almost can imagine the singular nature you describe without photos. My friend who hosted us has been member since he was a kid. I will have to ask him if he played enough golf back then to remember what the course looked like.


I thought 5 and 6 were the best holes on our abbreviated round. I liked 3 quite a bit as well.

And we very much enjoyed receiving the full Frank Bensel welcome.


Thanks.


Ira
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Peter Pallotta on April 21, 2022, 10:35:18 AM
1. If the tree or trees were there when the course was designed and the architect used them to influence the line of play and/or the wind patterns, leave them in place. If they have grown too large, prune them back.
2. If the tree or trees are not there from the beginning for those purposes and interfere with turf health, remove them or prune them back.
So simple a child could understand it, or even your average gca.com participant. This is all that needs to be said, and that has ever needed to be said.
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Sean_A on April 21, 2022, 10:48:49 AM
1. If the tree or trees were there when the course was designed and the architect used them to influence the line of play and/or the wind patterns, leave them in place. If they have grown too large, prune them back.
2. If the tree or trees are not there from the beginning for those purposes and interfere with turf health, remove them or prune them back.
So simple a child could understand it, or even your average gca.com participant. This is all that needs to be said, and that has ever needed to be said.


Hmmm, not really. Each situation is unique and should be treated as such. There is also the basic issue, what if the archie was bonkers? Another basic issue, how are these basic instructions funded? What if the tree that grew in a marvelous specimen?


Ciao
Title: Re: The pendulum might just swing back!
Post by: Mark_Fine on April 21, 2022, 12:33:41 PM
Let me repeat something very clearly, TREES are the most challenging/emotional design aspect to deal with on restorations/renovations/redesigns,…., for countless reasons most of which have been discussed on this site.  I have had members literally stand by a tree with their arms around it saying no way this one is coming down.  I have also had members admit they had zero clue what they were doing when they planted new trees. 


Bottomline, there will never be a universal solution for trees and/or how to use or not use them on golf courses.  Even employing an golf architect doesn’t guarantee anything but it probably is a worthwhile idea to have one assist before letting a course/club take matters into their own hands. 

I still recall Jack Nicklaus commenting to fellow tour pros about when he was in his prime he could drive it right over the trees cutting the corner of one of the doglegs at Scioto. The pros looked at Jack in awe saying there was no way any of them could attempt to do that even today.  Jack smiled and then did confess that the trees were about 40 feet shorter when he did it  ;D

I wonder if the person/architect who planted them knew that trees grow
;)