#3 Par 5. Hole plays straightaway all the way to the green. There are a couple of centerline bunkers in play one for longish drivers of the ball, and one about 40 yards short of the green to give you something to think about if you are trying to get home in 2. The green is broad and open in front, with a nice shoulder on the left that will take balls down into a chipping area below the green or a bunker. Many balls into the right half of the green seem to want to slide out the back, and it leaves you options from putting to pitching the ball up high. The bunkering in the fairway isn't very deep so there isn't much to worry about in terms of bashing the ball as far as you can in two shots. I like the right side of the green (the only side we played), but overall felt the hole was one of the weaker ones (this being a relative term, as the course is quite good overall).
#4 Par 4 One of my favorite holes at BT (along with #15) that is defined by the BRILLIANT use of a diagonal ridge that runs from left to right towards the green. Bail out left so you can get a look at the green and you can become bunkered, miss the tee shot right and you are blind into the green. Then the green fools you, because if you look at Mike's pix of that green you would think that approaches would curl left, when in fact they go the other way (at least in the front of the green). An outstanding hole IMO.
#5 Par 3 An absolutely wild green with a short to midiron depending on pin placement. Unfortunately we didn't get any back pin postions. The front shelf is probably 20-25 feet, then drops down into a shallow biarritz type trough about 5-8 feet wide, and then the green climbs up to a big top shelf that is probably 4-5 feet higher than the front shelf. The back shelf has some movement too, so you are not home free just because you made it to the right level. The carry across the rough isn't really a concern unless you are trying to get close to a front shelf pin, and even then you have fronting bunkers and mown rough that gives you a little buffer before ending up in unplayable land. A nice little hole.
#6 Par 4 A nice par 4 with the exception of the ho-hum green. Off the tee there is a central bunker in reach for avg hitters like me from the green tees. Play right and you will probably end up 2-3 clubs further from the green, but by looking at what the land is doing you would swear that right of the bunker is the shortcut. Go left of the bunker and the rolling/heaving ground will roll your ball closer to the green, although you might end up with a sidehill lie. But given the flattish wide open green there isn't much cause for concern.