First, let me express my thanks to Neil (spelling?), who guided me through the course today, and whom I hope was able to find his disc! (If it helps any, someone reported a green star destroyer found at Mt Airy today …but I'm fairly certain your throw wasn't 90 miles from where you thought it was…
A helpful and friendly local is always a plus, and the grounds crew were out mowing this beautiful, cool July morning, so my experience on the course had a great vibe.
This ten basket course boasts some really interesting lines of flight, technical challenges, and excellent amenities. From large, level, grippy rubber mat tee pads on gravel bases, to fully informative signage and a FANTASTIC kiosk set up at hole 1, to the decent MVP baskets, they've got a lot of heart and effort invested in this new course. Each tee has a small broom in case it's needed, and areas where they do not want traffic are roped off. There's plenty of parking*.
The holes here present a significant range of variety and challenge. Even though they didn't have any elevation to use, there are tree lines, shrub paths and even a pond that may come into play. You get to throw tight, technical wooded lanes and four or five medium long shots in the wide fairway bordering the 'out and back' section of the course. The 500+ footer does require control for your first throw, as it plays between the edges of the rough (you do NOT want to be IN!). I was actually surprised at the challenge level they've gone with here: enough to give this older player a few 'testers', and likely in the intermediate to advanced range of difficulty. Even though they're likely to have relative beginners playing, they should not expect an easy go of it.