Haven't chimed in for a bit, so forgive me my backtracking.
13 - loved the amphitheater setting of the green and the way you feel like you're turning a corner and heading back into the dunes. Key to me was to avoid getting blocked out to the right, thus lengthening a hole that plays into a wind tunnel. I thought the wide fairway gave you plenty of room for error, but the hole rewarded anyone that could manage a drive hugging the left side. The ability to run a ball onto the green fit a hole where you might have a long club in your hand on the approach.
13a - wasn't very enamored with this hole and thought it disrupted the flow from 13 to 14. Great green, but the walk back to the tees tainted my view of this little par 3 and how it fit into the course.
14 - maybe my favorite hole on the properties. Everyone needs to play this one into a stiff breeze, as the ability to take it on the direct line to the green is no longer an option (even my lilliputian drive cleared the right bunker on Saturday). Thought the raised green and the various bumps and backstops surrounding it made for interesting decisions on what club to pull and what line to play to get any kind of benefit on a slight miss. Watched Sean Walsh run a ball perfectly up the back slope and feed back to the pin on Thursday.
15 - again, another hole that shows its teeth when the prevailing wind is up. I hit driver here and on 17 on Thursday. I thought the left side pin was a lot harder to find than the back right pin we had on Saturday.
16 - Bill Brightly has it right in the sense of unease created on the tee. You know the play is as far left as you can get, but with the wind most likely in your face, many will opt for the safety of the right side. Too bad, because now you've created a blind shot over the bunkers (still doable, as my opponent proved Saturday morning), but I'd much rather have a look from the left where I am playing through the opening to the green with a sight line to the pin. As mentioned earlier, there's a subtle cant to this green even though it looks almost completely flat. I think the mound on the back right creates an optical illusion of some kind making most think the green runs the opposite of the front left to back right slope that is present.
Looking forward to the last two holes, and to reading the subplot of this thread (aka Bill Brightly and the disappearing Titleists).