1Hole number 1 is a dogleg left Par 5.Your tee shot should be right center of the fairway.A long iron second shot will allow for a full pitching wedge or sand wedge into the green.2Hole number 2 is a straight away shorter par 4.A long iron off the tee is recommended, resulting in a level lie for your second shot to an elevated green. Pay attention to pin position as this green is long and tricky.3Hole number 3 is a down hill par 3.Pay attention to wind direction and pin position, as both could make this a 3-4 club difference.4Hole number 4 is a slight dogleg right par 4.Risk reward off the tee, long iron or fairway wood leaves you with a full shot into this 2-tier green.Hitting driver off the tee will put the short game to test as this green is tricky.5Hole number 5 par 3 is 230 yards from the back tee’s and 130 from the front tee’s……plays just as hard from both. It is very important to keep your tee shot below the hole. Once again, a large green to club selection is key.6Hole number 6 is a challenging slight dogleg right par 4.Play a tee shot that leaves you short of the fairway bunker.This will leave you around 160 yards in for an uphill approach shot to a shallow green that is surrounded by bunkers.7Hole number 7 is a risk / reward short par 4. Play it safe with a mid to long iron8Hole number 8 is a straight away par 5. Longer hitters will have no prO-Blem reachingthe green in two. Pay attention off the tee as there is O-B right and trees all up the left. Positioning is key.9Hole number 9 is head professional Ryan Moore’s favorite hole.This hole demands an accurate tee shot with a 3 wood or long iron.This will leave you with a slightly uphill approach to a skinny green. Don’t miss the green left, right, or long.10Hole number 10 is a scoreable dogleg left par 5.Longer hitters aim up the left tree line off the tee for a shorter approach into the green. Try not to miss your approach shot left as that leaves a touch downhill chip.11Hole number 11 is a treelined straight away par 4.Accuracy off the tee is a must. Once you get one in play pay attention to pin position as this green is 60 yards long that can make it a 3-4 club difference.12Hole number 12 is a dogleg left where you must cut the corner off the tee to allow for a short iron in.Straight away off the tee leaves a long iron to fly a DEEP Pot bunker to reach this green in regulation.13Hole number 13 is a sharp dog leg right par 4.Cutting the corner allows for a sand wedge into a large green. Conservative play is straight away which leaves you 150 yards in. A 3 wood or long iron is all you need off the tee.14Hole number 14 is a shorter par 4.The miss off the tee is left leaving you a better angle for your approach into the green. O-B along the entire right side of the hole.15Hole number 15 is the shortest of the 4 par 3’s.It has a very large green so pay attention to pin placement.16Hole number 16 is a very risk reward par 5.Try and hit your tee shot up the left center of the fairway leaving you a clear shot to the green in 2.If you miss right, you will still have a chance to reach in 2 but it will be a blind shot over trees. #16 Can be an easy birdie or an easy double.17Hole number 17 is one of the hardest par 3’s in Alberta. .A short tee shot will allow for an unO-Bstructed chip to the pin. Don’t relax once you’re on the green…have a careful look at the break18Hole number 18 is a beautiful finishing par 4.Requires a 220 yard carry over water from the tee. If you don’t have that in the bag aim just left for a 150-yard approach into the green.
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.