If the pin is in the far position to the right, use the less defined 2nd fairway to the right. While accessible from the "primary" fairway, you're more likely to be left with a very difficult birdie shot.
If you're worried about driving between the guardian trees right in front of the teepad, you can throw a hyzer to the right and fade it in for a run at the chains.
Keep your drive low! After the rock wall the fairway drops about 5 - 8ft. and a disc thrown high to begin with can end up way to the left (BHRH) which is anything but clear.
While 18's fairway may seem like a clearer path to the pin, this hole is much easier to eagle/birdie if your first shot lands at the top of the hill on the true fairway.
While the opening in the trees directly ahead of the teepad is obvious, there is a second, less obvious opening on the left side of the swamp. It's risky, but if you can get a disc to turn/fade in right before it hits the massive tree on the left, you'll have a 30 - 50ft. uphill putt with nothing in the way which makes for a manageable deuce with little risk of overshooting.
When the wind is blowing, it's nearly always blowing from right to left once you crest the hill, so take that into consideration. While a RHFH or LHBH throw will give you the cleanest line, any turn will run the risk of exposing the bottom of the disc to the wind and can easily carry the disc into the river on the left. Also, the pin on the right is actually 18's pin. 11's is straight ahead at the edge of the river.
If you end up way to left on this one (not hard to do), it's possible to toss an anhyzer backhand or a forehand up and over hole 9's teebox to get to the hole. Just make sure there are no people there, of course.
Avoid throwing overstable stuff here. It's easier than it may seem to end up sending a disc into the drain pipe to the left of the hole, plus, during most tourneys the road is OB.
It's incredibly easy to overshoot this hole and either end up in the small river behind the basket in the left position, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. The little stream is casual water and it's not a hard putt from it for the deuce. In the left position, standing on the front left corner of the tee pad opens up the drive and makes a straight putter or mid shot easier to pull off.
If the teepad area is muddy, chances are there's significant standing water on the right side of this hole. It doesn't count as a stroke, but it can and will eat discs with impunity.