
November 10th, 2009, 05:27 PM
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Join Date: May 1st, 2009
Location: Spokane Valley Washington
Posts: 1,525
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Parks
I never said that.
You said you liked playing some of the short holes with your kids at High Bridge because they could birdie them, so I was making sure that you knew there were other courses in the area with short holes. Filtering people to courses that match their skill level is a win for everyone.
Also, my favorite hole at High Bridge is a short hole (#17, it combines aesthetic appeal with multiple fair routes, and a good scoring range), and I think that some of the shorter holes play really well (#5, its a tough landing zone to control, although it is deuce or die).
That being said, I think that High Bridge and Downriver are fairly redundant. The SSA of each course is 48, give or take a stroke. I would like to see one of them get a more challenging layout. Challenging doesn't necessarily equate with long, as catalystdg pointed out.
Also, putting in a new course is actually pretty difficult. We always seem to be able to get some interest from the city/park/whoever and yet new courses never get put in.
As a final note, pretend that every hole at High Bridge remained exactly the same but had 200 feet added to it (obviously not possible, just make believe). Wouldn't you just start 200 feet closer to the pin if your family or group were just beginners? It wouldn't hurt your experience in any way.
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Amen to that. I'm not saying make every hole at Highbridge 500 plus feet. That would be retarded. My favorite hole out there is 18 and that is longer but because of the elevation change is reachable by most with a solid drive. I get there with a Buzzz. I'm saying it would be nice to have all the holes have an a and b setup. That way the whole of Spokane isn't playing the same 18 hole over and over.
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"Honest work is for the downtrodden and the Polish"
Cleveland Brown
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