I'm guessing Pronghorn is more pleased that someone is promoting their course to a golf architecture website than upset about the very off chance someone prints these pages to take to the golf course and forgoes buying a $7 yardage book...
I wouldn't be too worried about litigation...
Agreed. Pronghorn has beautiful, flattish golf courses that feature a unique ecosystem, a dry high (4000') desert that is still mostly volcanic lava. The sparse landscape is populated with western juniper trees, which have a small range.
Taking a look at the holes to jog my memory, I especially like #3, #4, #6, #8, #9, #10, #12, and #15.
#3 is a long par 4 with lots of room and a big left shoulder by the green. You can bank them in there. Easy long 4.
#4 is unadulterated, a shockingly flat short par 3.
#6 is really snazzy, a mid length par 4 where a left fairway will give a huge distance and directional advantage, but it's too far for me to hit it reliably over there. William Grieve can hit it, and might have a go. For me it's fairway wood out to the right, then short iron in. The hole sort of throws the kitchen sink at you, in terms of attractive distractions, and it's fun to play.
#8 is one of the most photographed holes in the last ten years. Lava tube hole. It plays a very short distance, 170 equaling 8-iron for me, maybe 20 yards short. But the green is wickedly sloped, and it is, after all, the lava tube hole. From volcanic activity from only 12,000 years ago, from Newberry Crater to the south.
#9 is a sleeper, a neat design, a really long (600 or so), right curving par 5 with lots of room, lots of sand, and a flat, tiny green.
#10 has a great green complex, with the back left tucked into a little stone niche, and a pretty pot bunker front center.
#11 is my least favorite.
#12 is a lovely short par 5, with a late turn to the right.
I liked #15, a long par 4 left that allows you to play freely. despite the fact my host ran into me in the cart. It's OK; I was only slightly injured.
#17 looks like a snail with two separate eyes (greens). I played the left one.