Pros:
-- No. 6 (No. 2 on the main 9) is a good hole, 350 feet with the first 300 being semi-open before reaching the basket in a large stand of trees, making your approach line crucial if you don't have 350 power off the tee; I don't. No. 9 (No. 5 on the main 9) is also good. It's 260 feet with a line of small trees about 50 feet in front of the tee. The width of the gaps between the trees varies, but none of them are wider than 12 feet. No. 12 (No. 8 on the main) is similar to No. 2, but it's a little shorter and has a narrow direct line to the basket in the trees.
-- Tee signs are basic but functional. They have hole number, distance and par but no map. Since you can see the basket from every tee, it's not a big deal. However, the signs indicate this is two courses, with the shorter holes by the playground numbered 1-4. On the main 9, the holes are numbered 1-9.
-- Navigation is fairly simple. You've got a somewhat long walk from the playground holes to the main 9 (and that walk in reverse when you finish), but you probably drove past those holes on the way in, so you know where they are.
-- Counting all 13 holes, you've got good distance variation on a mostly short course: Five holes shorter than 225 feet, and four are longer than 325 feet.
-- Baskets are older DISCatchers. The look as if they have seen better days, but they still seem to catch OK.
Cons:
-- No seating at tees.
-- No map on site.
-- No water.
-- No restrooms.
-- For holes 5-13, the front of the tee is marked by a 4x4 length-wise in the ground. Holes 1-4 have a sign but nothing to mark where the "tee" begins or ends. No. 3 appears to tee from the outside of a walking path, but that puts you right up against a large bush. The tee for holes 5-13 are mostly OK, but a few are showing signs of wear; some are pitted and other are rocky, so they are becoming dangerous. No. 9 is the worst one.
-- The No. 9 tee is about 30 feet past the No. 8 basket, so an overthrow could hit someone standing on that tee.
Other Thoughts:
-- All holes are listed as par 3 on this site, but the tee signs clearly list several par 4s.
-- I played the shorter, open holes near the playground first (sort of a warm-up for the main course). Plus those are labeled holes 1-4 on this site. Those four holes offer almost zero challenge. Three of them are shorter than 200 feet, and there are two trees in the part of the course. The challenge does increase, however, as you end that four-hole stretch with a 220-foot uphill throw.