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guesst

Re:What makes a great routing?
« Reply #75 on: March 13, 2005, 08:02:47 PM »
It occurs to me, in reading this, that the routings I like are the ones I notice the least . . . the places where I walk off the course and talk about everything else, thinking about the routing in an "Aha!" moment after other topics are exhausted.  

Conversely, the routings I like least are the ones where I notice the route while playing . . . whether the trek from green to tee is long, I have to consult the map to find the next, or the "back and forth" corridors are just too consistently boring and overshadow other elements.  :-*

TEPaul

Re:What makes a great routing?
« Reply #76 on: March 13, 2005, 08:19:39 PM »
Darva D:

I like that thought of yours about a good routing---it reminds me of Olmsted's theory that the finest landscape settings should evoke quiet contemplation, not necessarily audible comment!  

guesst

Re:What makes a great routing?
« Reply #77 on: March 14, 2005, 03:38:43 AM »
Not that I get a lot of time for quite contemplation of a golf course when Armenian is in tow . . . ;)  But no one else I've been to a course with is nearly as interested in bunker design or fairway contours, so it's a trade off I've been happy to make. It's not complete puke . . .   ;D

Actually, the course that came most to mind when I made the discovery that the best routings are those that go unnoticed was Cascata.  I found the back and forth, mountain view, valley view, mountain view, valley view, to be too much, even while enjoying those views.  So that when I got to an intimate hole without those views, it was a refreshing change.  

Just the sort of thing I'd rather not notice.  

Not that I'm really complaining or saying I have a better idea.  How on earth one routes a course on top of a mountain at all is beyond my ken.  I would probably be better off keeping those musings to myself.  

Of course I rarely choose the route which would be in my best interest . . .   ::)

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