Episode 2 | The Origins of Golf Bunkers: How Sheep Shaped the Game
Before golf course architects designed bunkers as strategic hazards, they formed naturally across the windswept linksland of Scotland.
In Episode 2 of Under Par Over Time, Sammy Jo explores the surprising origins of golf bunkers.....and how sheep, coastal winds, and centuries of erosion helped shape one of the most recognizable features in the game.
You’ll learn:
* How Scotland’s linksland shaped the earliest golf courses
* Why sheep digging into sand dunes helped create early bunkers
* When the word “bunker” first appeared in the Rules of Golf
* What bunkers looked like before modern course design
* The stories behind famous hazards like Hell Bunker and the Road Hole Bunker
This is not a recap show. This is the story behind the game.
And if you’re just joining us, Episode 1 explores the history of Augusta National and how a bankrupt plant nursery became the most iconic course in golf.
Sources for this episode:
* Cornish, Geoffrey S., and Ronald E. Whitten. The Golf Course: Architecture, Design, Construction and Restoration. Wiley, 1993.
* Doak, Tom. The Anatomy of a Golf Course: The Art of Golf Architecture. Renaissance Golf Publishing, 1998.
* Joy, David. St Andrews: The Home of Golf. Pavilion Books.
* Frost, Mark. The Grand Slam: Bobby Jones, America, and the Story of Golf. Hyperion, 2004.
* Rules of Golf (1812), Published by the Society of St Andrews Golfers, later the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews.
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