Unique to Cobb's Creek (the golf course) is the walk through the woods alongside the eponymous water body from the 3rd green to the 4th tee. Incidentally, such a walk follows the creek upstream so it is helpful for this case study to work through the holes in order.
As is apparent from the aerial, the 4th hole area is near the confluence of a small tributary from the north that flows in front of the 17th green. The green is located on a peninsula just upstream from the meeting point and an island was created to provide the golfer a higher/drier drop area in the instance of plunking one in the creek.
Along the walk to the 4th tee, I spotted a potential bottleneck in the creek created by several large boulders.
Downstream view:
Upstream view:
Downstream from in front of 4th tee showing the narrowing due to the boulders:
Without paying too much attention while playing, I speculated from the aerial that the water flowed through the area in this fashion. The thickness of the lines showing relative amount of flow.
Much to my surprise, I found that the water actually takes the longer route around the island toward the 17th green/5th tee instead of the shorter/straighter route.
I further tested this by dropping leaves at various points upstream and seeing which path they took. Doing this 30 times, 24 took the longer route.
Furthermore, I was amazed by how little the tributary from the 17th actually carried.
View from in front of the 17th tee:
The area in front of 4 from the 5th tee:
The island:
The 17th hole tributary meeting the major portion of the creek:
The area directly in front of the green, showing the majority of the flow taking the longer route:
The downstream meeting on the tee side of the island, the boulders from the right side significantly slow down the flow on the direct route:
The right side (more direct) channel: