A short par-4 opener that quickly identifies the course as a Ross/Dye combo with the carry bunker and mounding near the green.
Back up the hill to near the first tee, the par-4 second features a fierce false-front and an angled and highly contoured green:
Strategic though not particularly aesthetically pleasing bunkering at the third, a mid-length, downhill par-4 played to a long and severe green:
The par-5 4th crosses the same stream on both the tee shot and second shot. Challenging the hazard on the right will be very helpful to those hoping to reach the green in two as a deep bunker protects this front-right to back-left angled green.
The 5th is a monstrous par-3, stretching close to 240 yards from the championship marker. From the tee, there appears to be no room to miss, though a small plateau short-left of the green will give the golfer some leeway.
One of several up-and-over par-4s, the 6th is a mid-length par-4 made longer by the fairway sloping back to the tee. The approach must be all carry as another false-front / deep bunker combo awaits the short miss.
Up-and-over again at the 7th, a 450 yard par-4 whose approach is played severely downhill to another angled green, this one protected by a small stream on the left.
Like the 5th, the 8th is a par-3 that looks more difficult than it plays (though it's still pretty tough!).
Not quite returning nines, the downhill par-4 9th ends a couple of hundred or so yards from the clubhouse. Bunkering is staggered from the tee, and many golfers may well choose to lay back from the second set of fairway bunkers 130 yards from the green.