T. Doak:
It’s a straightaway hole with no strategy. It’s memorable (especially to first time players) because the green is jacked up in the air, which you don’t expect to see in the lowcountry. If it was meant to be a version of the hole at Scotscraig that Macdonald occasionally used, it’s a pretty weak version of that. If it has other redeeming features I’ve never noticed them.
Where Camargo holds its own is the fact that several of its strongest holes (4,9,10,14) are not really template holes and that makes it stand apart from its cousins, even if its template holes are not the best versions of them.
T. Sturges:
For a straight hole, I think it has significant strategy. The approach is generally easier from the left half of the fairway, based on the slope/presentation of the green. The easier tee shot is to blast it down the right side, because there is no bunker or trees to deal with, but that leaves a more difficult approach. Depending on the hole location, the fierce green-side bunkers definitely factor into the strategy of the hole, as to challenge a right side hole location and miss right (into the bunker) is death and will most likely end in bogey or worse. The left bunker is even deeper!, but does offer a chance to get it up and down based on the slope of the green. An approach shot above the hole leaves a very difficult putt (especially at fast green speeds), and missing your approach short risks having the ball roll all the way back down the hill. The approach shot is one of the funnest and most demanding shots on the entire golf course. Beyond that, it's a stunning hole based on the fantastic green complex. Tom...me thinks you have underrated it.
As for comparing Camargo to YHC, I think the clear difference between the two are the greens. Camargo has a bunch of huge, flat greens. On a recent round there, I probably had ten or eleven dead straight, flat 30 foot putts. The course is on great property and is visually very appealing, but for my taste, too many big flat greens. I think YHC is a 9, and Camargo is an 8 (and I'm admittedly biased).
TS