Hole 1 - Par 4

Hole 1 is a shorter par 4, long hitters can reach the green off the tee but there is a slight dog leg right with a bunker guarding the front front right portion of the green. Typical play is a long to mid iron off the tee down the left side of the fairway leaving an unobstructed second shot into the elevated green.

Hole 2 - Par 5

Hole 2 is a par 5 that with a helping breeze can play like a long par 4. A fairway bunker on the right side encourages players to find the left side of the fairway off the tee. Those looking to reach in two have bunkers guarding both the front left and the right side of the green and while the green isn’t small missing long can find you replaying your shot with a hill sloping down and away from the green right into out of bounds.

Hole 3 - Par 4

Hole 3 is another reachable par 4 for long hitters. A pond occupying the end of the fairway about 200-220 yards away encourages long iron off the tee to leave you a wedge into the green. Bunkers guard the front and left side of this green and a mound behind the green leave a miss to the right with most putts breaking to the front left of the green you are left with a slippery downhill putt.

Hole 4 - Par 3

Hole 4 is an intimidating par 3. A pond in front of you on the back tee box seems to creep its way into a lot of heads just as a teaser as another pond runs the length of of the fairway and green all the way up the right side. A creek and out of bounds guarding the left means your shot has to be accurate if you want to walk away with less than a bogey on this tough par 3.

Hole 5 - Par 4

Hole 5 is a long par 4 with very few areas of relief if you miss the fairway. The tee shot is guarded on the left with some mature trees forcing you to take on the right side of the fairway. An extra club is encouraged from the fairway as this is a long green that is elevated above the fairway and missing short leaves a very difficult up and down.

Hole 6 - Par 5

Hole 6 is a long par 5 that leaves very little scoring opportunities if you miss the fairway off the tee. Trees guard the left and right side of the fairway so there is no cutting the corner through the dog leg right. The green is guarded front and left by a pond leaving a small area to the right of the green before the cart path and out of bounds if you want to try to get as close as possible. Most common play is to lay up to a comfortable number depending on pin location to try to leave an attempt at a makeable birdie putt.

Hole 7 - Par 3

Hole 7 is a longer par 3, with the tees at the back of the box even a middle flag can be over 200 yards away. There are no hazards on this hole but it still finds a way to leave players walking away questioning how they just made bogey.

Hole 8 - Par 4

Hole 8 is a pretty standard length par 4 that is all up hill. The tee shot is crucial with trees close to the box leaving you feeling like your closed in and need to hit a great ball. The left side of the fairway can be less forgiving as some mature trees can leave you trying to hit a low shot into the green. A small bunker on the left will keep your ball from traveling down the cart path to 9 but missing this green leaves a tough chip to try and go up and down.

Hole 9 - Par 4

Hole 9 is a great closing hole par 4. There is no way to ignore the pit that leaves many players aiming right into the trees. Local rule if a ball is hit into the pit you owe your group a drink, unless you can manage to save par. A good tee shot in the fairway leaves you staring at a bunker that sits right in front of the green. There is room between the bunker and green but if you hit the hill on the back of the bunker you could be left searching for your ball behind the green.