An uphill tee shot to the marker post leaves a tighter second to the brow of the hill or beyond.
A dip in front of the green can leave an awkward pitch to a raised green which slopes back to front.
A spectacular view of the Humber Bridge from the tee belies the difficulty of this downhill par 4.
The second shot is played across a valley to a raised green guarded by a severe step.
Another tough par 4 which plays uphill back across the same valley.
The second shot must clear the large cross bunker and plays further than it looks.
The first of the short holes. A well-guarded two-tier green is surrounded by three deep bunkers.
Anything long of left leaves a tough up and down.
Favour the right side to avoid the fairway bunker which longer hitters can clear.
This leaves a better line to the well bunkered green which slopes severely from left to right.
Trouble lurks down the right with another well positioned fairway bunker and deep woods along the length of the hole.
A solid drive should leave a mid to short iron which plays a club further due to the cross bunker.
Underestimate this short par 4 at your peril. OOB, a fairway bunker and dense gorse awaits anything right, whilst a dew pond guards the left side.
A long iron or rescue club is often the smart play, which leaves a short iron to the well guarded green.
The second short hole is difficult to club as the tee is so sheltered.
A two tier green is encircled by three large bunkers.
Favour the left half of the long downhill fairway which sweeps left to right. A long uphill second shot awaits.
Approach shots kick in from the right.
A classic risk and reward hole.
A reachable downhill par 4 is protected by a pond which eats into the front right of the green and OOB down the right.
A long iron removes the risk and leaves a short pitch to set up a good birdie chance.
A steep uphill par 4 to a stepped green.
Favour the right half of the fairway to avoid being blocked out by the trees.
Approach shots seem to play at least a club more.
A par 5 which requires a drive up the left side to give any chance of opening up a crack at the green.
Otherwise a sensible second down onto the flat of the fairway will set up a short pitch to a tricky two tier green.
The shortest hole on the course with probably the trickiest green.
Check the wind direction from the sheltered tee and try and leave an uphill putt if possible.
A sharp dog leg left. Position from the tee is key.
A long iron or fairway wood to a plateau, leaves a downhill approach to a severely tilted green from back to front and right to left.
Played from an elevated tee, position in the left half of the fairway opens up the green.
The approach shot feeds in from the right but beware the hidden pond which swallows anything long and left.
The last and toughest of the par 3's begins a testing final three holes.
A heavily bunkered green gathers from the right and plays a club or two further then the length suggests.
A long uphill penultimate hole favours a drive up the left which sets up a long approach.
Be careful to avoid the cross bunker 50 yards short and the large bunker at the right front of the green.
One of the toughest finishing holes in the region.
From the elevated tee, favour the left half. The large green is protected by the hole's only bunker which gathers anything leaked right.
A par here is as satisfying as anything which has gone before.