Pros:
-- Good use of land with several well-designed holes. The course is moderately wooded, and a creek comes into play on the first four holes.
-- Those four holes are the best part of the course. DGCR and UDisc disagree on distances, so I'm estimating, but No. 1 is low 300s mostly flat through a few trees before downhill to a basket on a plateau. Nasty algae-covered water sits 15 feet past the basket. Two and three are around 200 feet and have that nasty water left of the fairway. Four is nearly 300 feet with a mando tree about 80 feet in front of the tee that forces you to throw directly at the water.
-- Veteran baskets.
-- Restroom in park (between 8 and 9).
-- Picnic tables throughout park.
-- Trash cans.
-- Map on site, near No. 1 tee and a pavilion.
-- Nice playground equipment, so you've got something for the family to do if you are using this as a stop on a road trip.
Cons:
-- Holes 6 and 8 are poorly designed. Six is about 270 feet but has you throwing down a 10-foot wide tunnel between a 12-foot fence at a tennis court and a 5-foot high fence. Both fences are OB. In addition, you've got multiple angled metal support bars for the taller fence AND a line of pine trees more or less in the middle of the tunnel. That tunnel is approximately 80 feet long and starts a few feet in front of the tee. Once you clear the tunnel, you find a basket in the open except it's sitting underneath a giant sign with three support posts in your path. No. 8 is more than 700 feet (UDisc says 816) with a mando tree about halfway forcing a sharp left turn to take a building out of play. You've got an OB road about 50-60 feet short of the basket, which sits on a man-made island. Miss the island, and it's a penalty. The mando, the forced island and a hole that is more than twice the length of the second-longest on the course makes this a poor fit all around. Then you've got a 400-foot walk to No. 9. If the basket were placed left/short of the building, you'd have a mid 200s length hole with guardian trees and OB road behind the basket. There would be no need for the mando, no forced island, and the walk to 9 would be perhaps 100 feet.
-- The walk 6-7 is probably longer than the walk 8-9, so you've got two really long walks on a 9-hole course.
-- Baskets are not numbered. It's not a huge problem, but as you play hole 8 and throw around the building, you see basket 5 at about the correct distance before you see 8, which requires a sharper left turn.
Other Thoughts:
-- Disc loss potential is fairly high, mainly because of the water.
-- No. 7 is either a pro of a con, but opinions are likely split. It's either 260 feet or 335 feet with a 20-foot wide fairway. You've got OB road right and OB fence left. You've also got three trees spaced about 40 feet apart as you approach the basket. Thirty feet on the other side of the fence is a 4-lane highway, so not only is noise an issue, a sudden gust of wind from moving cars or trucks could affect your disc.