Mark: Here are my thoughts on #5 and #16 -
#5:
This is a straight uphill hole that is complettely blind unless someone can reach the top of the hill with their drive (which is more likely today than it was thirty years ago). The hill is probably about fifty feet high. There is OB along the entire right side of the hole (John Vanbiesbrook, the old Ranger goalie, used to live at the base of the hill on the left many years ago for a short time).
If one was to design this hole today from scratch they might not get anohter job but it was just a part of working with the property to get 18 holes on a piece of land back then. It was good practice for us to try to cull from memory the exact location of the green and to remind ourselves to look for where the flag was as we descended the adjacent fourth hole. Sofrom a golfing standpoint, it had its place. I am proably too close to this hole emotionally to give a truly fair assessment of it, but it comes down to if you accept the notion of a blind hole or not.
As difficult as the land is, it does its best to fit the ground. The tees are on a high point and you play to a green on a high point. Unfortunately, the landing area is either a flat at the bottom of a hill or along a twenty percent slope (Depending on how you hit your tee shot).
The hole was most likely the first I ever played in my life as it was the first of that loop we used to sneak out on to play. We would go: 5, 6, 7, 2, 3,4. It was also THE slope to go sledding down . If you stayed to the left (which would be the OB line along the right as you played the hole), you would literally have about a thirty foot jump to sled over.