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Marion, NC

Universal Park DGC

2.175(based on 3 reviews)
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wellsbranch250
Diamond level trusted reviewer
Premium Member
Experience: 10.3 years 659 played 639 reviews
2.00 star(s)

A Full Dozen Of Poke And Hopes

Reviewed: Played on:Nov 24, 2023 Played the course:once

Pros:

(2.210 Rating) A backdrop of beauty, but no fairways.
- NATURAL BEAUTY - Universal Park has got some big issues, but it's blessed with great terrain to work with. The course is mostly set in the woods, but with a few of the shots set in an open rolling field with a big pond. Hole (3) is a striking downhill par 3 with a creek lurking behind the basket. (7) throws along the pond with a stoic 700 feet high hill in the direct backdrop and it has the basket perched on a slope. (8) is a very pretty water clear. The sloping woods terrain for the remainder was pleasing to walk along. Sadly, there was lots of trash present on the ground which took away some of the park's grace.
- BASKETS - Pro 28 DISCatchers. So glad that Prodigy has not infected this area like the north Georgia scene.
- CHALLENGING - The difficulty here is flawed in my opinion. However, players that like escape artist disc golf may dig it. Much of the gameplay is pick a 3-foot gap from the tee and then sitting on pins and needles as the disc likely careens into a nearby tree. The challenge then pivots to conjuring up how to save par. This scenario then often leads to making sure that a bogey is at least salvaged. As an MA2 who does well in the woods, I finished with a 7 over 65.

Cons:

Ludicrous fairways
- NOT FUN - I should have just left after the first two holes. Two of the tightest fairways I've ever seen. The holes are very short and are very birdie-able on a rare clean run. Missing the center of a clean line by a few inches can result in a lot of pain. I don't think there was even a logical 3-foot gap on either of the first two holes. Moving on. Hole (4) has water along the right the hole way and it has a dissolving clean fairway halfway down. I would imagine that a lot of players end up in the drink when their hyzer shot clips one of the many trees as the disc attempts to cut back towards the basket. (5) is an uphill thread with a terrible tee. Hole (6) has no clean line. It's listed as a par 4, so I guess players should just throw a blind shot in the direction of the basket and then make the approach by whatever tree it happens to hit, hopefully from 150-feet out or so. (6's) basket is also a lame hanging basket roughly at regular height. Hole (9) is a blind 90 degree left hook with no fairway after 100 feet. (11) is a 4-foot line. (12) is a 3-foot line. (13) is one of the worst par 3 wooded holes I've ever encountered. A 90-degree left bending hole that finishes right and it's poke and hope after the first 150 feet. I doubt it's ever been deuced. Then (14) said, hold my beer. Calling (14) a poke and hope shot would be too kind. For those that know Star Trek, it's more like a Kobayashi Maru exercise, which is a no win scenario. The goal on (14) is to not lose one's cool. I lost… (15) is another poke and hope and (17) is an unnecessary gimmick double mando 25-feet from the basket. The fairway designs on this woods course are in my bottom 5 all time. Did an HB Clark doppelganger design this one? I shaved off a half point in my ratings for the course, which I think may have been too generous.
- TEES - In addition to the poor design, the tees are often terrible. It's hard enough to hit 3-foot lines on good tees, thus it made throwing here even more frustrating. Many of the tees offer less than 30 square feet of flat surface area. Some have roots well above the compacted dirt surface. I do applaud those that are attempting to rectify the tee situation. It appears volunteers are bringing in concrete pavers to build tee edge berms, which is helping a bit. Tee (9) had turf overlaid and it was among the nicest surfaces to throw from here. Despite the effort, there is still a long way to go to get the tees to respectable level.
- AMENITIES AND NAVIGATION - Not many amenities beyond the basics. There are a couple benches. There is a practice basket and a course map at the parking area. No alternate tees or alternate basket placements. The tee signs are small and diagrammatic, but work. Navigating around is ok at times, but frustrating at other times. There are some modest gaps several times between holes. There are a bunch of navigational cues to help direct, but either some have fallen down or more arrows are needed. I had to consult my map a handful of times.
- FINISH FROM PARKING - The start of the course is about a 400 foot walk from the parking lot. Basket is (18) is almost a 1000-foot walk back to the parking lot.
- TIME PLAY - The course took way longer than I was expecting. As a solo, it was 75 minutes from out of the car to back in and I had no pauses in play.

Other Thoughts:

Universal sucked the life out of me. A great designer could have easily produced a 3.0 rated course on my scales with the same budget constraints and a similar volunteer effort. Actually, if it weren't for the volunteer effort thus far, I may have scored it a half point even lower. Only players that love plinko gameplay are going to enjoy this one. The only reason I'm scoring it as high as I am, is because I clearly don't penalize poor design enough and that the beauty of the terrain was well up there. Considering that the other course in town is also not that great, I would recommend that players traveling along I40 through Marion, to just keep on driving. Similar courses I've played include Whispering Pines north of Tampa and Sunrise Rotary in central Tennessee.
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