Pros:
$5 for 9 holes, $10 for 18 holes. Probably a little costly to make this one of your usual stops. Obviously Lake Forest is in the welcoming mood inviting not only us disc golfers but those soccer players,eh, football players, eh, UH, foot golfers, too.
The gentlemen attendant wasn't sure where I should tee off from either but suggested I use the red rock tees that the foot golfers use. They seem as good as anywhere? The baskets are Innova Discatchers with the yellow bands and the small numbers on them. They were usually set somewhere to the back of the green. I always play the greens as OB on golf courses so this added to the challenge here. # 2 has a not too long water carry but then you're faced with the large expanse of green to miss, too. And # 4 had water on both sides of it's fairway.
# 9 was easily my most favorite hole. It's a dogleg left, probably 350' before the dogleg. But then you have to cross a 100' wide, mostly dry, stream bed to get up onto the green area. The basket sits left of the green on # 9.
Thre were a couple of shorter ACE runs (# 4 at 200' and # 6, also at 200'). # 5 and 9 were both over 500'.
Cons:
I was caught up playing behind two groups of extremely slow women. One group finally let me play through. I was out driving them.
$10 for 18 holes is more than I'm willing to pay on a regular basis. Especially just to play the same nine holes again.
Other Thoughts:
I did enjoy my round here. I'm glad I just chose the nine hole option. The pace of play would frustrate me. As with almost all the golf course courses, it's a lot too open for me to find real interesting. It's just too many wide open, drive-approach-putt sequences. I liken disc golf on ball golf courses to playing on ski resorts. They're gimmicky. They're okay for a change but I would quickly become bored with them.