1Drives played away from the bunkers risk running over the mounds and down to a creek.Missing the green left with a left-side pin will leave the player with a difficult up-and-down.2A long drive up the right side of the fairway leaves better players the option of getting home in two.Most players will lay up even with the middle bunker, about 100-120 yards to the green. The toughest pin placements are in the back.3Club selection is critical for your approach to the green which runs back at an angle.4The tee boxes aim you toward the bunkers.A well-struck shot to the center of the green will leave you with a medium-length birdie putt to most pins. Par is a great score.5A common play is using the three wood off the tee and for the second shot:A ball caught in the rough on the left-side slope presents an awkward third shotThe toughest pins are on the left shelf of the green.6Good drives leave a medium-to-short iron onto one of the longest greens on the course.Club selection can vary from three to four clubs; front to back of the green.The bunker to the right of the green is very much in play.7The biggest challenge is to hit enough club to get to the back right pins.The left bunker and long left are certain bogeysAny ball above the hole when the greens are fast can be real trouble.8A good drive leaves you on a medium to short-iron and a chance for birdie if the pin is on the front half of the green.A good drive leaves you on a medium to short-iron and a chance for birdie if the pin is on the front half of the green.9Club selection is critical for your approach.Balls hit over the green are almost impossible to get up and down.10The key is to put your ball on the same level as the pin.Pin placements on the left side over the bunker and deep left are especially toughGoing over the green leaves difficult up-and-downs.11Pay special attention to hitting the tee shot in the fairway with bunkers on the right and a creek running along the left side.The second shot is uphill to a terrace splitting the green in half.Toughest pins are left over the bunker on the lower terrace.12A deceiving dogleg left. Cutting the dogleg too close results in a shot from the rough that may carry down to a small creek.13Putts from the middle-right of the green to a back-right pin will break away from the water.Putts from the middle-right of the green to a back-right pin will break away from the water.14Any shots above the green to the left present a difficult up and down. Balls landing on the green on the left slope will feed down to the middle.Any shots above the green to the left present a difficult up and down. Balls landing on the green on the left slope will feed down to the middle.15Two well-placed shots leave you with a short-iron.The creek running along the left side comes into play on the second and third shotsAccuracy is needed for shots to the back pins.16Back tees require a well-placed drive up the right center with a mid-iron to the green.Tees in front of the water allow the player to hit around the corner with a short-iron onto the large green.The front bunker is a certain bogey.17Club selection is important when the wind is blowing around this elevated tee.The surrounding slopes make this green difficult to read.An easy par or a difficult birdie hole.18A creek borders the fairway on the right, then crosses it and runs along the left to the green.Shoot for the middle of this small green unless you are trying for birdie.Putts from above the hole are very fast.
GolfTraxx makes no claim of ownership to the flyover videos presented here. These are all YouTube & Vimeo embedded videos, none of which exist of the GolfTraxx website. The narration added by GolfTraxx to some flyovers is NOT embedded in the video, but rather played simultaneously. GolfTraxx can add narration for your course flyovers and/or supply content pages for your site. The feedback we have received is that the narration makes the silent videos more fun to watch and interesting.