Pros:
This is a great course to try your drivers on, with wide open spaces to throw into. The concrete tee boxes are long and flat for accurate footing, and the distances of the holes makes for a challenging round. A pretty quiet setting when there are no athletics going on, and not much risk of losing a disc.
Cons:
At this point, the cons of this course are pretty significant, unfortunately. The course map is nowhere near the first tee, but yet you have to memorize it well or you'll get lost trying to find the next tee box throughout the round. Tees are not marked from above, so you can't see them from a distance (and many holes are quite a distance apart). The pars for the holes are not listed anywhere I could find at the course, so I didn't know how I was doing relative to par. The cinder pathways weave through the course, and it is unavoidable to have a disc land on them and get chewed up at least a couple times per round. Holes 6, 7, 8, and 9 have no variety at all, basically a block of trees on the right side of each hole. Finally, the ninth hole is easily a quarter mile away from the first tee, so you have to pick to either walk a long way to get started, or a long way when you finish.
Other Thoughts:
If this expands to an 18-hole facility, that will help with a few things, like hopefully putting the 18th discatcher near the 1st tee to make parking easier. Labeling the tees would have made this round much more enjoyable as well, as I spent a lot of time wandering looking for the next concrete pad.