1The second hole requires an accurate drive to avoid the fairway bunkers.A hooked tee-shot will find trouble in the bunker to the left, which gathers a right to left shot. The second shot is played with a short to mid-iron to a well-guarded green.2The second hole requires an accurate drive to avoid thefairway bunkers. A hooked tee-shot will find trouble in the bunker to the left, which gathers a right to left shot.The second shot is played with a short to mid-iron to a well-guarded green.3An accurate tee shot is essential and would be played with atwo iron or three wood for the longer hitter, to finish short of the burn which crosses the narrow fairway.The tee-shot should be played down the right-hand side of the fairway to avoid the penalising bunkers on the left. The green slopes away from the player so the second should be fir5A fine short hole requiring a well struck long iron shot to carry into the heart of the green.The green has dangerous bunkers to the left, front and right. A difficult hole, which has the prevailing wind blowing off the beach.7The seventh is a magnificent golfing hole and is played from an elevated tee perched on top of the dunes.The fairway dog-legs sharply to the right with a sandhill and bunker set into the angle of the dog-leg. Any tendency to hook a drive will be penalised by the bunkers on the left.A lofted iron will send the ball over a slight gully to a well trapped green set between two imposing sandhills.8Originally called “Ailsa” because there is a perfect view of the rocky islet of that name, from the tee. The smallness of the putting surface accounted for the current name whe9The last hole on the outward half, the Ninth is a stiff two shotter.The tee-shot at this hole is straightforward and should be played short of the two bunkers on the left-hand side of the dog-leg onto a narrow undulating fairway with heavy rough onA mid-iron approach is needed to reach an elevated two-tiered green.12The twelfth is a slight dog-leg with the drive played over a rise into the narrow neck of the fairway.The tee-shot should be played left of centre to avoid the ridge of rough and gorse on the right. The second shot is played to a slightly raised two-tiered green falling off down a 13The drive at the thirteenth is hit to an undulating fairway, the feature of the hole beingthe second shot played towards an elevated green. It is advisable to take one club more for your approach. This is the first of a straight run of six homeward bound holes.14Bunkers to the left and right make a narrow entrance to the green,so it is essential to play a strong shot, which carries into the centre of the green.15The first of the very demanding four finishing holes, the fifteenth, is a long two shotter.The drive should favour the left half of the fairway to open up the second shot to a flat green which rests in a hollow. This hole is well bunkered on the approach and the emphasisThe drive should favour the left half of the fairway to open up the second shot to a flat green which rests in a hollow. This hole is well bunkered on the approach and the emphasis16The longest hole on the inward nine, the tee-shot is played to a.flat fairway laying-up short of the burn.The line for the second shot favours the left to be in the best position for the shot to the green, which is well protected by bunkers17The last and most difficult of the short holes. The tee-shot can be as much as a driver, depending upon the wind.The plateau green falls away sharply on both sides and is well guarded by bunkers, short and on the right and left hand sides. A challenging hole if you have pencil and card in you18The ideal drive at the eighteenth is straight down thecentre to avoid the bunkers on either side of the fairway. Bunkers short of the green will catch a mishit second shot and the green itself,which lies right in front of the clubhouse, is protected by a bunker to the left and two more to the right. An overhit approach shot could finish on the path at the rear of the gre
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