Thomas
I've only played 2 of them, and I agree with you on both 13 Nairn and 16 Dornoch, with some caveats. As for Nairn, my first few times I hated the fact that they chose to head up to the hill and into the trees away from the course, particularly given that they had lots of extra linksland to play with. More recently, however, I have come to respect the challenge of 13 and also the fact that 13 created a need for a downhill 14 to get back to the links, and it is a superb long downhill par-3. As for Dornoch, the hole was necessary to get from the lowest part of the linksland back up to the raised beach part of the course (1, 2, the tee on 3, the first part of 17 and the 18th) in one fell swoop, in order to get back to what is now 18 and then down again to the lower links which are now the Struie. 16 was #10 or #11 in the first 70+ years of the course (in today's routing, from the 6th green through to the 11th fairway was built in 1946). The tee shot is one of the finest and most difficult one on the course, and even though the green is not visible from the fairway and is primitively flat, the hole is the hardest hole to birdie on the course, at least for me. In the many hundreds of time I've played Dornoch I've had four 3's on the 14th (Foxy) and only one on the 16th. Finally, the 16th has the virtue of allowing an early path to the clubhouse if you game is finished or it starts to rain.....