Play Salmon Run Golf Course Like You've Seen It 100 Times
Download a mobile-friendly and printable hole-by-hole guide built from local caddy knowledge and thoughtfully enhanced by AI.
This is NOT a yardage book. This CaddyTips® guide delivers hole-by-hole written strategy, telling you exactly where to aim, what to avoid, and how to think your way around the course—before you ever step onto the first tee.
Whether you're a low-handicap player looking to fine-tune your approach or a higher-handicap golfer trying to avoid big numbers, this guide gives you a clear, confident plan for every hole.
Get Salmon Run Course TipsWhat You Get
✅ Local course knowledge from pro caddies
✅ Hole-by-hole strategy and shot guidance
✅ Mobile-friendly viewing on any device
✅ Printable tournament-ready PDF format
✅ Smarter targets, safer misses, & better decisions
✅ Instant download + lifetime access in your library
✅ Seamless viewing through CaddyTips® free app
Built By Local Professional Caddies
Every guide starts with insights from local caddies who know the course, hole-by-hole, shot-by-shot. They understand from experience where players of all skill levels gain strokes.
Enhanced by AI
We combine caddy knowledge with AI-powered analysis to uncover strategic patterns, risk-reward opportunities and smarter decisions on every hole.
Here is a snippet from the Salmon Run CaddyTips®
Hole 1 - SALMON SPAWN HOLE
Position, not power — the fairway pinches
Par 4 - 397 / 335 / 314 yds.
Salmon Run opens with its named first hole: a
par 4 that demands a well-positioned tee shot. The documented warning is explicit — do not go too far off the tee, because the fairway narrows dramatically.
Tee Shot
Before you start your round, take a peek at the pin positions and green complexes of the 9th and 18th holes, which are near the first tee. This visual will help you approach these greens. Because the prevailing spring and summer winds on the central Oregon coast blow powerfully out of the north/northwest, players almost always receive a major boost from a tailing breeze right on the opening tee box. CaddyTips® recommends teeing your ball a bit higher if you have wind assistance. A well-positioned tee shot is required, and the fairway narrows dramatically the farther you hit it. Low handicap/long hitter: this is the opposite of a bomber's hole — take a club that stops in the wide part, not driver. Mid/high handicap: a fairway wood to the fat of the landing zone leaves a clean look; the high second cut here swallows anything pushed wide. CaddyTips® always recommends that the last couple of swings you take on the driving range should be practicing this tee shot and visualizing your success.
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