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A golf course could be sorted into several classes, such as landscape, the time it takes to perform the course, and what kind of access people have to the course.

Golf course design is an art form. Many courses incorporate elements of their natural setting in their layouts. The way the architect uses or reshapes the organic terrain decides the landscape category of this course.

• Links Course

Links courses are constructed on narrow segments of sandy land involving shore and farmland. Links course work together with all the natural landscape of those strips of lands across the Irish and Scottish coasts. They feature the property's turns and slopes, and the fairways frequently have a pure roster to them. Wind can be a major element in the game on a links course.

Although purists claim that links courses are only in the section of the planet where they originated, courses built from the connections tradition are located globally.

• Parkland Course

A manicured golf course and careful landscaping, and plenty of green trees and grass are usually called a parkland course. The property is much more tailored. Therefore fairways are typically smooth. Unlike links classes, which can be, by definition, located in coastal regions, parkland courses tend to be far from the shore.

• Desert Course

Courses in the desert are usually an oasis of green beneath the region's dry, coastal landscape. Even though these classes work together with all the natural dunes and other terrain characteristics, their abundant bud is unnatural to the region. Much irrigation is necessary. Desert courses are located only in areas of the planet using a dry, desert climate.

• Executive Course

Designed for quick play, an executive course focuses on holes that may be drawn up within a reasonably short time. It's excellent for executives who must return to the workplace or are on their way home after a long day at work.

Low-par holes hasten the time it takes to play with an executive course. An executive course could have 9 or 18 holes. An 18-hole executive course is generally no more significant than level 65.

• Regulation Course

These are 18-hole classes that have a greater level than executive courses. The vast majority of the holes onto a standard golf course are level 4s.

Many law golf courses are called championship classes, even though they might never sponsor a formal championship. These courses have excellent playing surfaces, and they're frequently par-72 classes. However, this isn't an official standard, and championship classes are occasionally level 70 or 71.

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