OK, Mac, I will try to give a brief summary of the rest of Ben's holes:
#2 - medium par-4. Tee shot over low ridges protruding in from the right and the left; second shot to green in saddle between two small hills. Best hole on his routing by far, although the tee is on an upslope and he probably can't see as much of the hole as he would like to. Might be able to extend the tee further up on the map, to hit over the hollow off the tee and make it a par five.
#3 is his small Dell hole, already commented.
#4 is a short par-4, hillside on the left of the fairway all the way ... a bit like #14 at Ballyneal.
#5 is a decent par-5, just over bottom of valley to landing area, then 18-20 feet back uphill to a skyline green.
#6 is a par-3 out along a narrow ridge, falling away to both sides. Think #2 at Kingsley, but not as severe.
#7 is probably the weakest hole. Drive diagonally down into narrow valley; pull it a bit left and you run into a steep bank on the far side. But then the second shot is to a green site that falls away too steeply, and would require fill, unless I've got the scale all wrong here. If the green and tee slid back to the south 100 feet this would be much better.
#8 I'm going to take a wild guess that this is where Charlie stitched his two maps together, because the topo was really hard to read here ... the fairway and green are along a narrow ridge that comes up 8 feet from the last dark contour on the left, flattens off briefly, and then goes back down 8 feet to the dark contour on the right. Not many landforms that make a transition like that. Anyway, routing along the ridge is a cool idea, but it's very narrow and steep to both sides, so probably needs earthwork in the landing area and on the green.
#9 plays downhill over a bump on the right to the bottom of a valley, then turns and comes back uphill to a green set on top of a narrow ridge, with a steep fall at the right front and back of the green. Probably too severe for a green site, requiring some earthwork, and certainly an aerial approach.