Lawsonia's 8th, a great example of the use of visual deception to create contradictory assessments about how to play the hole. It's a shortish par 4, with a semi-blind tee shot, but with a green and often the flag visible from the tee. On the tee, the play looks like it would be an easy straight shot right at the green, but that will leave the ball in (usually) unforgiving native plants, and an approach over a gaping bunker to one of the course's smaller greens. (The topography of the hole doesn't allow you to see that a straight-at-the-green tee shot is straight into the rough.)
The (I thought) correct line of play was to play a little cut over a fairway bunker -- an easy carry from the tee -- because visually the hole appears (somewhat) to gently dogleg to the right. But this still leaves a fairly tricky approach shot, with bunkers frontish, right and left in play and visible.
Playing with GCA poster Mike McGuire (who showed the way), the correct play is to bomb it left of center, which shoots the tee shot down a small hill and sets up an approach shot that is straight at the green, with no bunkers fronting the green. The hole really doesn't dogleg, after all; it goes straight for most of its yardage, and then abruptly turns right with its heavily bunkered green complex. To take advantage of this abrupt right turn of the hole, the best play is to move your tee shot as far left within reason as possible. There is a ton of room long and left on this hole, and none of it is visible from the tee. A wonderful little hole, and one of the best uses of the lay of the land at Lawsonia to create strategic intrigue by Langford/Moreau.