Pros:
There is some significant elevation change in this quaint, small-town park setting. There is some good variation in shot-types with there being sub-200 and 300-plus ft holes, left and right, and up and down holes. Navigation is extremely easy as the next tees are pretty close (probably too close) to the previous basket. The tees are natural, but there are arrows in the ground pointing to the next basket (which are numbered and either blue or white, so easily visible). Other park amenities include a swimming pool, volleyball court, the Oregon Trail RV Park, and a playground. Course map at the beginning, if I remember correctly. You'll probably have a peaceful round to yourself here.
Cons:
You'll notice the biggest con as soon as you step up to the first tee: hole 1 throws directly over/through a playground. Pretty minor other than that. The tees are a little too close to the previous basket, but that probably won't matter too much as traffic is pretty low here. There is minor disc loss potential if you go too far right on 3 (it would have to be a terrible shot to get over the chain link fence), 4, or 5 (both feature a tree-line on the right).
Other Thoughts:
Let's talk about the baskets. They're homemade (I think I counted 12 chains) but actually did a pretty good job. I did have a spitout when I hit dead-center pole from 30 ft on hole 8, though. I think you can avoid spitouts like that the same way you can avoid cut-throughs on a Mach III: soft and low-center. Overall, I liked them. To summarize: I was pleasantly surprised by this beginner-friendly 9-holer in the middle of nowhere.