Firstly, very nice to have Mat chip in on this thread with his experience as an ex-member there.
The left side of all the front-9 holes forms the property boundary and is heavily bounded by trees and shrubs. The 2nd-9 holes inside the loop are tree lined, quite tightly so in places. Sometimes trees are inappropriate, but at Walsall they appear to have been planted thoughtfully and are maintained in the same manner. As such they are not a burden but rather IMO enhance the course with a requirement for positional play and good use of angles. The par-3's are good holes. The par-5's are on the softer side. The longer par-4's play hard and the short par-4's, a couple of which are drivable, require thought and quality execution - they arn't just get out the Big Dog and wack it holes. Lots of course management is needed at Walsall.
Here are more photos of some of the green complexes/bunkers at Walsall.
Below - 290 yd uphill 1st hole with the green built below the crest of a rise. Green narrow at front. Wider at rear. Stepped green, but not a massively steep one. Photo taken from 70 yds out.
Below 400 yd par 4 3rd. Green from the left front corner. Green falls away at rear and to the right. As usual in photos, there is more slope than there appears. The 4th tee in background.
Below - same green as above (3rd) with photo taken from the rear left side. The green is approached from the right. Approaching from the left is the very fine long par-4 16th hole.
Below - short 280 yd par-4 6th with photo taken from 70 yds short of green. Flattish slight dogleg right-to-left. Narrow green in front widening at rear with step where widening commences. Easy hole to take out the Big Dog and to try to drive the green and instead end with a double-bogey.
Below - same green as above (6th) from front left edge of green. Widening of green at rear more apparent. Run-off at left side and rear more severe than the appear. Black and white flags in the distance are on the 13th and 12th greens.
Below 190 yd slightly uphill par-3 7th from the rear of the green. Bunker at front right of green. Green much wider at rear and slopes quite severely downwards from rear to front and also to the right at the front (left side in photo) and to the right at the rear (right side in photo).
Below - same green (7th) photographed from the left side at the rear of the green (right side in photo). Bunker, lip of which is visible, is very large. Green feeds off to left side (right side in photo). Good/nasty spot for a pin. OB nearby on the left along the entire side (right side in photos) of hole.
Below - 160 yd slightly uphill par-3 10th hole. Green sits at top of rise. Mound on left side, ridge across the middle, two bunkers and severe downslope at right. Green slopes from left-to-right throughout but also fist half of green slopes down to the front and rear half of the green slopes down to the rear.
Below - same hole (10th). Pin seemed near the front in previous photo but as photo below shows it isn't
Below - same hole (10th), with black and white flag, as viewed from behind. Other (yellow) flag is on the 12th green. Note earthworks in between the two greens. Best not to go long on the 10th.
Missed a few holes now due to camera operator error!
Below - green of 450 yd par-4 very good dogleg right-to-left 16th hole photographed from right front of green. Green has narrow front, how many times have I typed that in this thread, middle section is lower and the rear section both raised and wider. A very good green (and hole).
The 17th is a really strong 430 yd par-4 with a raised green fronted left side by two bunkers and one bunker to the right side and incorporating a raised rear section and very strong run-offs on the left past the bunkers. An easy green to screw up a good score on. Angle of late in the day sun was unhelpful so sorry no photo of the 17th.
Below - looking back up the fairway from behind the green at the 530 yd par-5 18th hole. The hole is a slight left-to-right dogleg and as you see plays downhill. There's a ditch 50 yds short of the long green. As an aside, you often find a bench situated behind the last green at courses in the UK. A place to sit and sign the scorecards. The green hoop is a brush to remove any clinging grass from your golf shoes.
When I was at Walsall the greens were excellent, smooth, fast and true. The fairway grass was a little long. Despite the Dr MacK heritage the conditioning of the bunkers was unfortunately very poor. There was very little sand in them and several had the lips flaking and breaking away. The rough was cut nice and low, in line with Dr MacK's doctrine of no lost balls (?), which is a preference of mine on parkland courses. If your ball did go into the trees it was easy to find the ball and easy to play out again if your were not over ambitious, yee olde half-shot penalty. Again per Dr MacK's doctrine, many of the tees were extremely close to the previous greens.
I shall return to Walsall GC sometime and would encourage all those interested in Dr MacK courses, especially green/bunker complexes, to pop in if you have the opportunity.
All the best.