1
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Par 4, Length 386m
Offers a straight away downhill par 4 with a generous landing area. A drive just short of the right hand side fairway bunker offers the best angle into the green. Careful club selection for your second will stop the ball on a narrow green sloping from front to back.
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2
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Par 4, Length 352m
With an undulating fairway and a hazard up the entire left hand side, there is a premium on an accurate tee shot aimed down the right hand side. From here you with have a medium iron into an elevated green guarded by front left bunkering.
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3
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Par 3, Length 192m
The first of our par threes is a downhill shot to a green protected by swales and run off areas both front right and long left.? Any shot left short of the green but online has a good chance of running aboard favouring the left hand side.
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4
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Par 5, Length 515m
This par five offers a decision off the tee, try and carry the large fairway bunker on the left hand side and play your second from the upper level, or play safe to right but be left with a blind second shot.
There are fairway bunkers positioned up the right hand side to catch second and third shots drifting right. The large green is guarded by a front bunker and a large run off at the back of the green.
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5
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Par 4, Length 365m
A straight away hole with two left hand side fairway bunkers and a bank on the right hand side. A tee shot positioned short of the bunkers on the left, leaves a mid-iron to the green. The green has a false front and swale that needs to be carried with the second shot.
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6
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Par 5, Length 498m
From tee there are fairway bunkers either side of the fairway, a straight tee shot will kick forward over the brow of the hill, leaving two options. Either a mid-iron layup down the left hand side to open up the green or have a go in two but a bunker 50 metres out from the green and two swales and run off areas will leave challenging shots if out of position.
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7
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Par 4, Length 361m
Dogleg left, club selection is important off this tee, tee shots must favour the left side and get as close to the end of the fairway as possible.? There are two large green side traps that need to be carried to reach a back pin position.
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8
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Par 3, Length 148m
Water must be carried to land a ball on this green. There is a bunker positioned front middle which needs to be avoided. Behind the greens falls away to a hazard. The green has two levels split either side of the bunker.
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9
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Par 4, Length 373m
This hole is a dogleg right, with fairway bunkering on the corner of the dogleg and a lake on the left hand side. The second shot is a mid-iron to an elevated green with a false front and three different levels.?
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10
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Par 4, Length 368m
The ideal line off the tee is at the power pole behind the green, best to err to the left side as the rough is very heavy to the right.
Second shot needs precise distance control to keep the ball on the correct side of the ridge that runs through the green
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11
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Par 3, Length 160m
This par 3 plays downhill so club selection is vital. A hazard borders the hole to the left so favouring the right side is always safest.
The green has a ridge running through the middle,?being on the right side of it will lead to an easier putt.
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12
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Par 4, Length 389m
Proving to be the most difficult hole on the course demands an accurate tee shot to the left of the large pine tree that sits on the right side of the fairway.
After the tee shot leaves an approach from 150-200m to the green. The green has a ridge running across the middle and a bunker short left.
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13
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Par 5, Length 508m
Accuracy is key here on all three shots, a hazard up the entire left side of the hole means centre right on the tee shot is recommended. The second shot demands even more focus as the out of bounds right comes into play. Once in position it leaves a short iron to a table top green. The green has gentle slopes so rewards any ball on the green in regulation.
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14
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Par 5, Length 540m
This tee shot requires the ball to be moved right to left. Good tee shots will benefit from additional 40 metres of run. The second shot requires careful thought as to where you are going to lay up. Hazards on both sides mean an accurate shot is required. The third shot can be anything from 5 iron through to sand wedge, the longer the third the more the trees guarding the green come into play. A fairly level green with a ridge running across the green makes for a good birdie opportunity.
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15
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Par 4, Length 317m
Accuracy rather than length is vital; a well-positioned tee shot will leave an approach of 100 metres to a green with two swales. The green is difficult to putt on so staying below the hole will give you the best opportunity to make a birdie.
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16
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Par 4, Length 441m
The tee shot is semi blind so the line is the centre of the clubhouse in the distance. A hazard left and long rough on the right means an accurate tee shot is required. The green is offset to the right so distance control is vital for the approach shot. The green falls off to the left so the right side is a little easier to play from.
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17
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Par 3, Length 181m
A downhill par 3 that plays one club shorter than the distance suggests. The only miss to avoid is long which falls away to a water hazard. The green is mostly flat with subtle slopes.
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18
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Par 4, Length 391m
A large lake in front of the tee needs to be avoided. The fairway is very generous with fairway bunkers used to aim at.
The green is elevated and has two distinct levels. If you can get the ball on the right level a birdie is on offer.
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