#1. 300'
Start in the open. This is a straight shot, but going to either side can get you OB. The left side of the fairway is bordered by the outfield fence of the softball field and the walking path comes from around that fence past the right side of the basket making the fairway narrowing the closer you get to/past the hole. The fairway is also slightly downhill with a slope to the right so if you throw it the "wrong way," it can roll away and potentially OB.
#2. 470 par 4
Placement tee shot. There is a line of trees about 120' or 130' in front of you with a gap cut out of them that is about 15' wide. You can go wide to the right to get around them if you want (not a mando,) but the walking path is over there and you also would have to bend it back pretty severely to land where you need to be. (I suppose some people could even go over the top, but that won't be an option to most.) About 200' from the tee you get to the woods. The fairway has been cut right out of the woods. It is about 20' wide at best, going uphill. The basket is set to the right at the top of the hill and is pretty well guarded.
#3. 315'
Throwing downhill into the fairly open bottom, but you have to navigate a couple of large old trees off the tee (the closest is in front of the tee slightly to the left, the second one is more to the right. There is a (usually,) dry ditch at the bottom which plays as casual water if there is anything in it. The hole will play from left to right, making it a good sidearm for a righty if you have that throw.
#4. 320'
Pretty narrow from the tee as you're kind of throwing out of a tunnel. You can't get too high and you can't get right at all. The fairway will open up some to the left (currently there is a massive tree down there narrowing that left side of the fairway, but it will be removed,) but this is also an area that could hold water when it has rained. The fairway is straight but you'll have to get past some thin trees to get to the basket, which is left of the fairway once you get near the clearing.
#5. 405'
The first of the "old" holes you'll play (used to be "#6.)
The walking path (OB) is to your right the entire length of the fairway, and the lake is about 20' right of that.
The fairway is about 80'-100' across and wide open for about the first 325', when you get to some large oak trees that are in front of the basket. If you're starting your drive straight you need to keep it low, as another tree hangs over the fairway in front of the pad; going left is not really an option as there are more trees there--the best option is to hang it over the path and let it work back. The best approach to the basket on your second shot is to stay to the middle/right of the fairway to come in from the right, but you can approach from the left if you're up there far enough (gotta keep that one low and bend it quickly to the right, though.)
#6-600'
This is a combination of two old holes, as you play from the old #7 tee to the old #8 basket. This hole requires you to keep every shot low. The trees are planted "grove" style, making two or three natural lanes each about 15' or 20' wide. The basket is then hidden behind a pine tree to the left of the "middle" lane.
#7-280'
"Old # 9." Throwing over the crest of a small hill, but that crest comes into play due to the low-hanging trees on both sides of the fairway. The hole turns slightly from left to right, but you have to stay left off the tee to avoid a cedar tree that stands in the fairway on the right side, ready to eat any disc that comes its way. The basket is set up on a platform made of cross-ties. It's about 3' tall, meaning the basket is about 5' or 6' off the ground.
#8-390'
"Old #12." Again throw over a crest of a hill that makes your entry window very small. There is rough to either side of the fairway (mostly cedar trees and thorn bushes,) until you get down to the woods, which are mostly old oak trees. The fairway goes just a bit to the right. Near the bottom of the incline you get to the tree line, which means you have to keep your drive up just enough to get over the hill but low enough to not be knocked down. If you have it you can throw a roller here, but you better be sure you can keep it pretty straight or you'll just get in the rough to either side.
#9-340'
"Old #13."
Trees in front of you in the "grove" pattern again. You can go straight but you'll have to get a big turn to the right at the end of those trees. Most likely you'll throw a bit to the right and hope you don't hit any of those trees. The trees stop about 270' from the tee. The fairway then opens up with a bit of an incline, but there is a tree about 35' in front of the basket that can mess with you. Go too far past the basket and you can start rolling downhill, especially to the right.
#10-340'
"Old #14." Fairway is a sweeping turn to the right, running downhill and then back uphill Your best bet is to try to land at the bottom of the hill, but there are trees down there too, and if you get under one you'll be hard-pressed to have a decent second shot.
#11. 590' par 4
This one is tricky. You're throwing from the old #16 tee, but most likely you aren't going straight off of it. There is a route that will be opened that way, but most will go about a 45 degree angle off the left side of that pad (eventually that pad will be expanded, possibly in a "fan" shape, to allow for a run-up in either direction.) You'll have to keep it pretty low to avoid the canopy, but you'll still have to get uphill to your landing area. You'll want your disc to work to the left when you land so that you have a decent angle on your second shot--stay too far to the right and your second shot is basically going to be a lay-up for placement. The fairway then goes back downhill some and turns to the right, up the "old #18" fairway, which is narrow, uphill, and has a couple of trees right in the center of the fairway.
#12-510' par 4
"Old #19." Your first chance to "grip it and rip it." Longest teepad on the course so you can get a Happy Gilmore run-up. There are trees to the right you can get into; the road around the campground is OB to the left. That road turns to the left at the top of the hill and the fairway opens up to a wide-open field. Downhill from there to the basket with no obstacles in your way (other than the nearly ever-present wind coming off the lake to the left.)
#13-250'
"Old #1," the "Gallows Hole." Lake right behind you as you throw up a slight incline. You have to hit an opening between two trees that's about 40' or 50' wide and about 200' from the tee. Past that the basket hangs about 8' off the ground. The wind from that lake can mess with you, so if your drive isn't close to the basket you better just put that second shot under the basket because "going for it" can blow you far enough off course to get you a 4.
#14-270'
"Old #3" Tee from a slight tunnel. There is a labyrinth of trees in the fairway with rough to either side (rough with thorny blackberry bushes.) There is a straight line but most will take the somewhat wider lane to the right. The basket is pretty well tucked in behind a tree. Water pools on this hole in a couple of spots at times.
#15-255'
"Old #4." Narrow fairway for about 180' with a big tree on the left and a few big trees on the right. The rough on the right is being "let go," and will eventually cease to be rough and become woods. The fairway opens up to the right, but if you go too far right you can get OB.
#16-325'
"Old #5--last of the 'old holes'." Keep it low. Big old trees throughout the first 270' or so of the fairway. Hit one and kick left and you can be in trouble over towards the #5 fairway; hit one and kick right and you could very well be OB. Fairway is a clearing past that line of trees, but there is another batch of them surrounding the basket.
#17-330'
Not much room to work with off the tee. There are woods the entire way to the right and the OB walking path (and lake) to the left. There are a couple of trees right off the tee that force you to be accurate. One of them makes you choose--stay right and run the risk of getting too far right and into the woods or go left around it. If you choose the left route you'll be out over the path, meaning you'll have to bring it back pretty hard to the right or cost yourself a penalty stroke. Everything does open up but the basket is cut out of the edge of the woods near the back right of fairway. There's a bit of a slope downhill from the basket but the rough is thick enough at this point that you probably won't roll away far enough to get in too much trouble.
#18-435' par 4
Decisions, decisions. You have to throw over the lake, but how much of that angle do you want to take? To get from the tee to the shortest corner is not quite a 200' throw. The fairway runs to the left along the entire length of the earthen dam. Ideally you'd like to be able to land your drive on the top of the dam for multiple reasons; first, you'd like to be able to see the basket on your second throw, and second, if you go too far over the dam (or don't make it to the top for that matter,) you're going to have an awkward stance for your approach. If you run at the basket and go too far there is also the chance that you could roll downhill into the water.