1A tee shot placed at the top of the hill is ideal.Anywhere in the fairway between the 100 and 150 yard markers keeps the approach on the same level as the green.Leave the approach below the hole as the green is severely sloped from back to left.2Middle of the green is never a bad thing. Be mindful of the wind, as the tee is sheltered on this hole.3A tee shot placed up the left side of the fairway allows for a better approach angle.Study the yardage carefully. The elevation change requires an extra club or two.The false front of this green turns good shots into bad results.4Favour the right side as most drives will kick down into the middle of the fairway.Generally into the prevailing wind with a modestly elevated Green.Severely sloped from back to front with a difficult hump in the middle. Place the ball on the same sides as the pin for an easier puff.5Keep it simple and play to the 150 yard marker.A forced carry over water to a completely protected green.6Don’t let the water intimidate. Calculate the yardage to clear the pond and swing freely.An extra club or two is required to compensate for the elevated green. There is a drop area at the corner of the pond.7Hit it down the middle and hit it long.There is not a lot of room for error if you are going for this hole in 2 shots. If you are laying up, aim at the two left bunkers well away from the water.A shallow green that penalizes any shot that doesn’t hit it.8A drive over the best bunkers will leave the best approach options.An easy approach if the pin is cut on the left side of the green. A pin cut on the right half brings the front bunker and trouble both right and long into play.This green is known for its subtle unseen breaks.9The more water carried with the tee shot, the less yardage required to negotiate on the approach.A high, soft landing shot well up the green is required from anywhere.Severely sloped from back to front. A putt from behind the hole will run and run and run.10A good drive aimed over the bunkers on the left will set up a long, downhill second shot.If not going for it in two, the target is the flat area at the bottom of the hill that begins inside the 100 yard marker.The front half of the green slopes towards the fairway. The back half slopes away.11The tee shot should be kept up the right side of the fairway to avoid the water that is just beyond the willow trees on the left.Too long of a drive will bring the water that cuts across the fairway at the 150 yard marker into play.Uphill, into the prevailing wind, to an extremely protected green.12If there is any indecision on club selection, go with the longer one. Middle of the green should be the only goal. The drop area is just before the bridge.13A drive up the right side will leave a shorter approach.Mind the pin position for both the approach and the putt. A pin cut on the left-side will require and extra club.A huge swale in the front, middle portion of the green will make any putt hit the stuff in the hole an adventure.14A shot up the left side of the fairway will offer the biggest landing area while keeping away from the out of bounds that runs up the right side of the hole.A long, narrow green that requires the player to hit the proper portion.A large ridge runs perpendicular to this green.15A miss to the left will be penalized, a miss to the right still offers a chance to save par.16The best drive does not tempt the left side, but forgets the generous landing area straight off the tee.The goal on the lay-up is to be just inside the 100 yard marker to provide a flat lie for the shot into the green.A severely sloped green makes 3 putting a definite possibility.17Length is not the focus, but putting yourself in a good position off the tee should be.An elevated green that is shallow and penalizes anything not struck with the proper yardage.18A tee shot aimed just left of the bunker down the right side will catch the down slope.Middle of the green is best. A pin cut on the left side is the superintendent’s evil joke.Severely sloped from back to front if putting from behind the pin, the ball will run.
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