Hole 7: Par 5, 475 MetresAs we cross Morey Road to play 8 holes on the third paddock, we reach what I think many would say is the stretch of holes that is the weakest on the course. The land on the third paddock, and even moreso on holes 7, 8 and 9, is very flat, and even with the changes to these holes in recent years, they stand out as the least interesting on the property. Like I said of the 6th, these are not bad holes by any means, but at this facility they are clearly the worst.
Until 2005, the right hand drive bunkers were some 210m to carry and frighteningly sat only 10m from a home on the property's southern edge. This boundary issue necessitated a change, and the tees were shifted right, the fairway shifted left and the bunkers extended, all in an attempt to pull the aiming point away from the out-of-bounds. At the same time, trees lining the left side of the hole were removed and replaced with rough, partially opening up the views across this portion of the property. In 2013, this rough was converted to fairway creating a shared fairway between the 7th and 8th holes.
Somehow I feel the placement of the right-side bunkering doesn't work well. Unlike the similar bunkering on the 2nd on Royal Melbourne West, I didn't feel the strong desire to challenge the trouble. Even my hosts advised that the wise play was to play away from the trouble, perhaps with less than driver, and play the hole as a simple three-shorter. Oddly, the green is angled such that an approach from the outside of the dogleg has the preferred angle... not that there is anything wrong with a reverse-dogleg, but if that's the goal, I'm not sure the inside of the dogleg should be bunkered.