Mike Cirba,
To not see the options and strategy at # 3 immediately qualifies you as the President of the Ray Charles Architectural Society.
# 3 is a great hole, filled with options.
Off the tee, on the second shot, and yes, on the third shot.
With respect to # 11, a par 3 of 117 yards, uphill, with a narrow, small green, par 3's rarely have strategic options.
What are your options at # 3, # 10 and # 15 at Pine Valley ?
# 12 also abounds with options, do you lay back or attempt to go for the green. Do you hit it up the right side off the tee giving you the ideal angle into the green, or do you "safe" it left, providing an awkward if not difficult shot forward ?
# 10 and # 16 are long tough golf holes, but certainly the approach to # 10 has several options. Do you carry it to the green or run it in ? The same could be said, to a lessor degree about # 16.
# 5's options are mostly on the approach, not at the tee.
If you don't see the strategies, the options on these holes, it's not the fault of the golf course. The perception of options can be in the eye or lack of eye in the beholder.
I think the first few aerials, with the shadows, distort the width of the golf courese, it plays much wider then the aerials would indicate.
Mike, what tees did you play from ?
If # 4 with a back left pin doesn't cause white knuckles, I'd like to know what does. The second shot on # 9 can do the same, as can the second on # 12 as a par 4, and # 18.
Mike, have you tried an oculist ?
