Up the hill to the tee, hole 7 takes something that fades left to right (and reminds me of quite a few of the holes at Winton Woods). Avoid long, left of the basket (thorns).
This is an ace run opportunity, but requires a bit of touch to fade in right to left to the relatively tight green. Stay out of the creek left. If you play for the deuce here, sliding in low works.
This hole is a great place to break out your shorter sky hyzer shot (rhbh), because you need to have a shot that drops in at a sharp right to left angle to stick on the green. Long is OK, but really hard left gets you in the trees short or even the creek way left.
The first tee is back to the right of the shelter. Best tee shot here fades right to left and either aces or digs into the hillside by the pin, right? Choose a disc unlikely to roll away.
If the leaves are in place, it's better to hyzer (rhbh) around the tree just left of the bridge than to launch too early and hit the shrubbery just to the left on the way down the hill (it's full of thorns). In the winter, there may be a better direct line.
You need to drive over 300' really accurately here. If you miss, it's better to go into the shallow creek bed on the left, where you can recover, than into the thick bushes on the right, where you'll sometimes just need to dump it back out to the fairway, and have a likely bogie.
This shot bends to the right around that tree, and plays a little longer than you expect. I've been using a slightly flippy mid to fairway disc (rhbh), but if you throw a good forehand, that's the way to go.
Make sure you walk from #1's basket to the ridge of the hill and line up #2 basket & tee, then pick which tree branch is right over the basket to give you a target for the blind shot.