Pros:
-- Beautiful park. This is a nature preserve, and poisonous snakes are among the inhabitants. Other than an occasional house or two you glimpse through the trees, you are unlikely to see or hear anything manmade that is not disc golf related.
-- Great land for disc golf. You've got trees, water and good elevation for North Texas.
-- Port-o-potty at parking lot.
-- Coyote tends to have shorter holes with tighter lines compared to Beaver. No. 18 is a good example. It's 200 feet downhill, but the first 50 feet is a tight line through trees. Hit one of those trees and get a bad kick, and bogey is definitely in play. I love wooded holes, and with my noodle arm, shorter holes. Nos. 2-8 fit the bill, all potentially 270 feet or shorter. Three of them are 225 or shorter.
-- Concrete tees pads, although some are chipped/broken at the corners. Some are fairly short.
-- Decent custom signs (old but mostly in decent shape).
-- New Veteran baskets are color coded for the two courses: Coyote is red, and Beaver is blue.
Cons:
-- Long walk to reach No. 1, and long walk back to parking lot after 18. If you are playing both courses, you can save yourself some walking by playing Beaver first. After 16, it's a short walk right to Coyote 1. Play the full Coyote course. After 18, you walk right by the Beaver 17 tee on your way to the parking lot.
-- Many trees have been removed, but some toe-breaking stumps remain.
-- Navigation can be tricky. Having played the course dozens of times, I still sometimes have to pause to remember how to get to the next tee.
Other Thoughts:
-- Ace runs abound with 11 holes potentially 260 feet or shorter, but all require accuracy with tree waiting to not just knock you disc down, but send it into serious trouble.
-- No. 1 is a mostly open 300-400 foot hole with a few trees to navigate, depending on the pin location. After that you are in the woods with tight lines until you reach 14, which is a 400-footish downhill throw with trees right and left but a wide fairway.