Okay, I have time to write a little more.
First, some generalities:
Easily the best $35 to walk 18 I've ever spent. Easy walk, too. Tough weather - who the heck thought it could be 50 degrees in Texas in September? Not this Pittsburgher, that's for sure. Don & Lou said winds like we played are pretty common. Seemed like a good 2+ club wind for most of the round, with gusts up to 3 or 4 clubs. I thought 10 & 18 seemed a little out of place with the water, but I guess you need a reservoir & you might as well use it. At least it was used fairly well. It probably doesn't come into play for too many on 10, unless you choose to balloon your tee shot like I did. Tons of room to bail out left, but this makes the second shot super tough, since you're now hitting to a green canting strongly away from you. Apparently the wind we had Thursday morning was opposite the prevailing wind. As I read my yardage guide to refresh my memory, the wind notes are all opposite of our experience.
Some hole specifics:
Fun opener - not a really difficult tee shot or a tough length, but if you don't hit it to the right area, you have your work cut out for you. Neat little skyline green perched atop a hill.
I never saw the fairway on #2, so I can't really say how a normal approach would look. More strong contours on the green. One of us (not me) pitched real close, only to watch the ball keep on rolling past the hole location, well up front. I would think the strategy would change pretty dramatically depending on the hole location and obviously the wind. It was a solid 3 shot hole when we played it, while the yardage guide calls it a short reachable par 5!
Another cool green on #3, perched on a hill. Dramatic slope from back to front, death over the green - unless you're Don. If I recall correctly, he made a great up & down from the back bunker. The bunkering on this hole looks & plays great.
#4 - Another shortish par 4, though I probably am swayed by the downwind way it played for us. Lou was wondering if the ball I was about the hit out of the bunker on the inside of the dogleg was perhaps his, as he had hit it on that line. I said I thought he was well past the bunker, and he was - about 120 yards!! He carried the bunker with a sweet drive that rode the wind & (presumably, we couldn't see it) followed the downhillish meandering fairway to a spot maybe 20-30 yards short of the green. He was then faced with an almost impossible little pitch, since he was a little right of the green and the green slopes strongly right to left & is guarded by a bunker on the right. Not a great reward for a 350 yard drive! Rub of the green at it's best, IMHO. How often do you get to complain you hit a 350 yard drive too far?
I don't remember 5 too well, which is surprising, since I think it was the only fairway I hit all day. Damn that Tom Doak & his narrow penal fairways!! I'm probably the only golfer alive who needs more width than Tom offers.
#6 is a medium length par 3 that dramatically different in different winds. Lou said he hit 8 iron the day before & I think he hit a good 3 or 4 clubs more on Thursday with us. The green must be too tame, however - I was able to hit it in regulation, my only GIR of the day I think. Maybe my only par, too. I wasn't keeping score, I was enjoying the shots.
Don mentioned #7 above. You can't really see how much the fairway opens up to the right, so you don't necessarily know to hit it over there. The green is very severe, with the front third or so being essentially a false front. The open front does allow lower approaches, however - as Don noted, Lou pitched beautifully to about 4 feet by playing it a bit lower.
Cool tee shot on #8. It looks like there is some bunkering that could come in play off the tee to the left of the green, but it turns out to be a series of dramatic greenside bunkers that creep up the last 50 or so yards to the green. You're trying to guess if they're in play & they're 425 yards off the tee! That should tell you how dramactic they are. Another tough hole location made chipping & putting either a chore or a delight, depending on how you looked at it.
#9 seemed to be the most roller coaster hole on the course. Down off the tee, climbing up to a crest about 300 yards off the tee, slightly down from there, & then a last little jaunt uphill to the green. The green is tiny & the bunker greenside right killed me - Adam hadn't fully explained to me what I was doing wrong yet.
Most of the greens on the front had bunkering on only one side, except the par 3s, which were more heavily protected.