The ideal drive will be down the left half of the gently sloping left to right fairway, leaving a perfect angle for the second shot to the green with the shoreline as a backdrop, avoiding a fairway bunker short left and greenside bunker right.
‘Wales’ best kept golfing secret is well and truly out!’
Dog leg right around the bay offering the choice of the safe line to the left leaving a longer, but straight uphill shot to the headland green or a draw shot over the edge of the bay, leaving a short iron pitch.
Uphill shot from a tee perched on a small rocky outcrop surrounded by the sea to this par three hole with its elongated green guarded by bunkers right.
All but the longest and bravest hitters will take a long iron or fairway wood and lay up at this short, but daunting par four, leaving a pitch to the hill top green. The beach or the incoming tide await any sliced shots here.
Spectacular risk and reward par four – the risk, attempting a 200 yard carry over the bay, the reward, a short pitch to a green set between two rocky outcrops. For the faint-hearted, bail out right leaving a medium to long iron second.
A short par three played from a tee located on a stone tower to a green sloping sharply away from the golfer towards the sea. Over clubbing could result in the golfer's ball finding the slipway of the local RNLI lifeboat station.
Par three played with short or long iron depending on the prevailing wind. Tee shots falling short will finish in the craterlike hole across the fairway and the badly sliced shot will be lost in the large ‘ballwash’ to the golfer’s right.
A spectacular par five with yet another tee clinging perilously to the cliff edge and requiring a pin-point accurate drive and second shot down a narrow strip of fairway bounded on the right by the sea and on the left by difficult rough.