Pros:
Neat little hillside and bowl area that is played by more than one hole. The use of the little elevation is nice.
Was not crowded at all, no other discers, and even though the course is essentailly smack dab in the middle of a church/school park, no one was around.
The road and fences can be played as OB for some more challenge.
Cons:
The baskets are abused, beaten, rusty, don't watch well, etc, etc.
Half of the course is right next to, across, or over existing park, playground, and sitting areas. High potential for interference and a poor design choice overall. These types of courses that play on top of existing playground facilities rate very low on my list because they show just a lack of dedication to disc golf and the course, so how good do you expect it to be anyway. And they are never long term visions, just an attempt to throw a relatively cheap activity on top of other activites. Definitely not the course an average or above player, or a travelleing player would wanto to play.
The greens are often nestled too close to obstacles, tree lines, etc. I am all about risky and protected greens, but these border on ridiculous, and could get that way of trimming is not kept in check.
Course flow is bad at best. Holes are cramped right next to one another so errant throws or a kick off a tree can interfere badly. The intended routes of the holes are not exactly well designed for any reasonable disc flight for just about any skill level player. i.e. some pins are slammed right in the middle of a bunch of trees around a corner. You just throw near the trees, try and putt under them, and take a 3. No risk/reward or required skill level.
There are only one set of tees and one set of pin locations. Not much variety can be had here and not much variation between skill level of the players with the given tees (a longer set and a shorter set would serve the course better, and because they are all grass, seems simple enough to add this variety and added skill to compliment better players as well as newbies)
Wooded holes and canopy holes are present but #9 is essentially pinball and #8 is too short with a bad green when you blow by teh pin. The wooded holes could be designed better, offering mutiple routes given the property).
There is no water hazard here.
No garbage cans.
Other Thoughts:
The property is pretty neat, and the whole twon of Marquette is. Taking into consideration this course, Al Quaal, and the former Marquette Mtn course, the area needs some help building a solidly designed course consistent with modern standards, PDGA skill levels, and PDGA rules. This property has some very unique features, but the course simply flounders in it's own limited design. Since the one tee is grass, fairways or routes are designed without intended or specific required skills, half the course is on top of or through playground equipment, the greens are often too protected, and the baskets are beaten, this course rates as less than passable. It is not something to go out of your way for. It's just worth checking off your list because of the hilly holes. However, I did think it was better than Al Quaal. I wish Marquette would get in touch with someone who has designed top level courses and install something amazing somewhere on all the gorgeous land they have there!