The Oklahoma wind rips through this course, and it will impact your discs, even in the woods. Somehow you'll be surrounded by trees yet you can feel the headwind on the tee. I personally liked this, because I've heard about the wild Oklahoma winds for disc golfers. I enjoyed experiencing it, but I doubt most would see the appeal.
Hole breakdown.
*All descriptions written from a Right-hand perspective. FH = forehand. BH = backhand.
Hole 1. Blind shot, and the tee pad is slightly right from what looks like the gap to the pin. More or less you want to go straight and end up slightly right from the tee. You'll need to throw high to get over everything, but not too high. If you're facing a headwind, throw FH. The wind here will push your disc where you can't find it. I spent an hour looking for a drive. A stable FH spin should get you to the ground faster.
Hole 2. Another blind shot. This one is more open off the tee. If you move around the tee pad enough, you can spot the basket through the trees. There are BH & FH lanes around the main obstacles in the center of the fairway. Take your pick. The basket is on an elevated green with a tree nearby that can leave you with no putt even if you're inside the circle.
Hole 3 is a downhill bomb. The BEST shot is a stable BH that turns right but fades back. There's a lake along the right side of the fairway. Turn something over too much and you're wet. This is a long hole, and likely not reachable in one shot. You'll want to get right from the tee to see the basket tucked away in a cove of trees. Again though, get too right and you're in the lake.
Hole 4 is a tight wooded hole. It veers right from the tee, so a stable FH fits the shape, but a Turnover BH is probably better. There's a slight left curve 80% through the fairway, so best case scenario, you might get a 45 foot putt.
Hole 5 is a longer than the others so far, and it's hard to reach. The basket is right of the tee, and there's a large tree in the fairway. A turnover BH on the right side of the tree could get you a birdie look, but that would be a superhero shot. The safer shot is to play left of the tree with a distance FH. You'll still have a 150 to 200 foot approach, but you should have a line. Or, take the turnover with something like a fairway driver. You don't want to be off the fairway. I overshot this hole on the turnover flex and had to lay up the cove where the basket was still 50 feet deep.
Hole 6 is a low ceiling BH that needs to skip left. This is a simple rounded shaped fairway, so you can go over stable driver, but you need to skip far. I threw what I considered the perfect shot & was still 45 feet away.
Hole 7 is a blind, slightly downhill shot. The basket is considerably right of the tee, but you have to push 150 to 200 down the fairway first before moving right. I think the only show that could get to the basket is a BH turnover. I went FH (not knowing the pin placement yet) and had a low ceiling approach about 60 from the pin.
Hole 8 is an open, distance throw. From the tee you can see a cove 350 in front of you. The basket is 40 feet or so in and to the left. BH shapes best for the skip in, but forehand would open up your approach to the green if you don't have that distance.
Hole 9 is another more open hole. The lake is on your right, and there is a road on your left, but you have considerable room to land. This one feels like 419 feet. With the difficult winds, throwing something stable off the tee for 250-300 made sense for me. If you avoid the few trees in the fairway, you should have an open shot into the green.
Hole 10 is similar to hole 8, but the green is more straight in front of you. Throw the distance and try not to pinch the tree line. If you get too close, you cut off any ability to access the green.
Hole 11 take you back into the woods. The basket is inside the cove in front of you, deep and to the right. The line to the basket is not clear with how deep it is. Power players may be able to throw a high FH hyzer over everything. I think turnover BH is best for most players. There are a lot of trees at the entrance to the wood line. Pick what you see as the biggest gap and shoot for the best. If you get through the trees, but don't get right, you should have a pretty clear approach.
Hole 12 is just a dynamite disc golf hole. Average players & pros can reach it, and average players & pros can bogie it. This is slightly uphill, and tree at the top of the hill makes you hit a gap at the end. This is a straight shot.
Hole 13 slopes downhill and to the right. There's one tree in front of you off the tee, and a tree line to your right the entire length of the hole. A big FH hyzer could get there around the outside of the tree, but the inside line is more tangible. Either a stable disc that pushes foreword on a FH line or a turnover backhand could get there.
Hole 14 is the big arm hole. It's all of 700+ and there's nothing in your way to block the wind. The basket is left from the tee along the wood line. You start throwing up hill, and once you crest it, it's pretty easy to see the basket.
Hole 15 is LEFT of the basket for 14. Your eyes will tell you to go right, but that's hole 17. This is a tight, downhill, wooded shot. AS long as you push forward enough, either a FH or BH could get there. The fairway slopes to the right, then the basket is back up hill and to the lift. Uphill like 45 feet or so. There are a few limbs blocking lanes up to the basket, so the putt is tricky. In theory, the turnover BH is better because it might cut up the hill some.
Hole 16 is another tight, wooded shot. The fairway slopes downhill and then back uphill. Ideally, it's entirely an uphill shot. To park this, you'll need to throw something stable. The basket is left of the tee, and there's a short tunnel of trees leading you to it. Fade around them, and you have a putt.
Hole 17 is blind from the tee. The basket is considerably to the right. The basket is slightly uphill and guarded by a ton of skinny trees. There's a low ceiling here, so pushing a turnover BH to the basket would be tough. A great shot would get you a circle 1 putt. An over stable disc on a FH line, low, with skip, could park it.
Hole 18's basket is to the right from the tee. There's a tunnel shot to start, and open-ish area in the middle, and then a tight window to access the green. By tight, I mean likely 5 to 8 feet. If you want a birdie, you need a BH turnover, but it's slight, ideally for a stable putter or midrange that flexes out. The green is surrounded by rough, so if you go for the green off the tee, you could end up in a bad spot. Throw 150-200 off the tee with a putter/midrange into the middle area, and you'll have a chance to shape a shot through the gap.