I played it into a 2- 3-club wind, and it was one of the half dozen most difficult shots of the day, even with a massive green. Why? First, the green was very firm, as was the entire course in early July. Second, because the shot is so short, you need to hit a very lofted club. But the tee is so exposed, and the wind is so strong even at green level 40 feet below, that the wind is going to do a number on your shot.
Deep breath. The pin was right of center, about 1/4 of the way back. The first guy in our group, a 6 handicap, tried to play it under the wind with a punched wedge. He kept it low; it landed only a step or two onto the green; but he'd taken off all spin, so the ball took a big hop and rolled all the way to the back -- and trickled just off the back edge. That scared the rest of us, so each of us figured we'd have to play it a little higher -- bringing the wind even more into play. Neither of the next two guys could hold the green, one rolling it into the bunker, and the other pulling it left. I, a 12, had the benefit of seeing all three shots. I knew it was important to keep it fairly low, and quite short, but of course the wind caught the ball and knocked it straight down into the scruffy valley far short of the green.
Summary: into a stiff headwind (which I expect is common), onto a firm surface (likely), distance control becomes quite a mind game. Par is no gimme, and you can easily walk to the next tee wondering what happened. A 100-yard hole, and now you've got only four holes to make up for it...
The view is magnificent.