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Hole 1
The first hole, a Par 4 is relatively straightforward. |
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Hole 2
The second is a medium length Par 4 with an interesting
two-tier green. |
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Hole 3
On to the third hole, the first of the famous Par 3s – short
but tricky as it requires carry all the way due to the
bunkers directly in front of the green... |
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Hole 4
With the driving area located in a dip, the Par 4 fourth
is long and challenging. |
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Hole 5
... while the fifth, a lengthy Par 3, has a long, narrow
green with a steep slope on the left and trees to the right. |
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Hole 6
The sixth is a long, dog-leg right Par 4 with trees
down the right and a ridge across the fairway. |
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Hole 7
A short Par 4, the seventh also has a dog-leg right fairway. |
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Hole 8
At the eighth, a short Par 4, you need to drive uphill
to a raised green with a bunker at the front and dip on
the right. |
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Hole 9
The ninth, a medium Par 3, can be rather intimidating
as you drive over a ravine! |
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Hole 10
Coming back, the short Par 4 tenth offers risk-reward.
You can either play for position with a 3 wood or iron,
or go for it with a driver and hopefully hit the green. Hazards
of the hole include a tree-lined ravine to the left and
out-of-bounds on the right. |
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Hole 11
The eleventh, a long Par 3, is truly spectacular – and
perfectly private being entirely situated in a natural
hollow. With a raised tee and raised green, from the tee
you can’t see any other hole. |
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Hole 12
On to the twelfth, regarded as the club’s signature
hole which was featured in Golf World magazine as one of
the finest in Britain. You drive down from a highly elevated
tee to the fairway of this renowned Par 5 which runs along
a valley to a raised green |
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Hole 13
The thirteenth is a long Par 4 with a tree-lined, dog-leg left
fairway so you must position your drive to go for the green... |
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Hole 14
... while the fourteenth, a Par 5 dog-leg right,
trees are a hazard off the tee. |
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Hole 15
Water comes into play at the Par 4 fifteenth where you
drive over a pond and an uphill dog-leg right fairway to
a two-tiered MacKenzie green. |
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Hole 16
The Par 4 sixteenth is a sweeping dog-leg left with a
couple of fairway bunkers strategically placed to catch
the unwary! |
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Hole 17
There’s a challenge waiting at the impressive seventeenth
which boasts a very high raised tee down to another raised
and an even higher green reached downhill across several
intimidating bunkers. It has actually been described by
Peter Allis as one of the best Par 3 holes in the country. |
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Hole 18
At the eighteenth you drive up over a ridge to a plateau
on which is the raised green. |