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New Market, AL

Sharon Johnston Park

3.835(based on 3 reviews)
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12 0
PastorofMuppets
Gold level trusted reviewer
Premium Member
Experience: 5 years 183 played 130 reviews
4.00 star(s)

Pleasantly surprising

Reviewed: Played on:May 24, 2024 Played the course:once

Pros:

WHAT TO EXPECT: Well maintained free to play public park style course. Upscale in the amount of work, infrastructure, design, and continued maintenance that have gone and continue to go into this course. Advanced level course by design but still enjoyable for lesser skilled players. Expect some extremely beautiful holes as you get into the meat of the course after a pretty slow start.

AMENITIES: Modern bathrooms, on site camping available, pond for fishing, in ground pool. As mentioned by other reviewers the addition of stone work and cedar fencing in many areas add to the pleasant look of the course. Practice basket near Hole #1 tee. Most tees have a bench nearby and have shade available. Firing Range on the Property (more on that later)

TEES/SIGNAGE/BASKETS: Large course map and great tee signs with all relevant information. One tee per hole, large concrete with plenty of room for run ups and follow throughs off the actual pad. Almost brand new Yellow Innova Discatcher baskets with flags on top. Directional arrows to next to on bottom of baskets.

DESIGN: Very long layout with only two holes that I remember under 300 feet. Definitely an Advanced player design that requires a lot of distance and accuracy off the tee starting around Hole #5 onward. After a slow start, once the woods start to come into play the course ratchets up in both beauty and difficulty immensely. Par is a lofty goal here for us mere mortals.

EXTRAS: Holes like #9 (elevated tee throwing down over a valley into a tiny gap in the tree line) #10 (with the downhill turning shot over a creek) #17 (which really needs to be seen and played to appreciate the waterfall) are all excellent execution of great visual and demanding course design.

Cons:

ONE TEE: I hope there are plans in the works to add short tees to this course so that noodle arms can enjoy this course. There were about 6 holes with short pin locations available, but I played on a week where the course was set up for Rocket City Blast and the baskets were not in.

VARIETY: While the course looks amazing and has some truly spectacular holes, I felt like I was throwing the same disc on every hole and each played out similarly with go to driver and approach disc on the longer par 3's or go to driver and either another full driver or fairway on the longer par 4's.

ELEVATION: The course is mostly flat, and despite the waterfall and a couple creeks, doesn't offer much in the way rolling hills courses can. Not a large knock, but the caliber this course would be with elevation and more water features would be immense.

SHOOTING RANGE: I wasn't expecting this, despite having read that one existed before I went. As a veteran, that first crack in the background did catch me off guard and make the hair on my neck stand up though. Then I remembered the shooting range. Much funnier for my cardmates than I at the time. But I got used to it.

NATURE'S FURY: We played after a torrential downpour and high winds the night/morning before. I won't knock the course for the standing water and downed limbs/debris from the storm. The humidity and mosquitoes were probably the worst thing we had to deal with. Remember to stay hydrated folks.

Other Thoughts:

Excellent and aesthetically pleasing course that I am glad I got to experience. I could see this course being very high in the best Alabama courses list with some room to improve and climb further (short tees, revamping of the bland Hole 1-3 start, some additional water features), but the bones and some meat are there for sure already. I usually don't score public park courses super high because they are often filled with uncontrolable flaws (space, multi-use, other facilities intertwined, upkeep, etc) but this course is pretty close to top notch as far as park courses are concerned. Top 3 in courses you must play in Huntsville for sure. Right between a 3.5 and 4.0 for me but I gave this course a bump to 4 because it stands out among the other 3.5's I've reviewed.
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16 0
edfaits
Gold level trusted reviewer
Experience: 13.8 years 91 played 42 reviews
4.00 star(s)

From a Rec Player's Perspective

Reviewed: Played on:Feb 28, 2023 Played the course:once

Pros:

OVERVIEW: An excellent "town park" course, free to play. Length appropriate for advanced players, but beginners and rec players can also play a round. To be clear, my rating of a FOUR for this course is from the perspective of my rag-arm skill level. Big arms may have a much higher opinion of this course.

-Excellent brand new Innova DiscCatcher baskets with highly visible flags, well mounted, no unfair or gimmicky greens. The "Short Baskets" are red, the rest Innova Yellow.

-Well done cement tee boxes, safe run-ups and follow-throughs. Slightly above grade to avoid washout, but still no "drop off" danger.

-Mostly wide-open shots, not too many trees or elevation changes, but what's out there the designer has used very effectively.

-Well-made tee signs. Distances were accurate. Course navigation was usually straight-forward, thought going from the ninth basket to the 10th tee took a bit of looking around. Good course map near the first tee, and UDISC is accurate.

A couple of holes have a bit of a walk to the next tee: nine's basket to tenth tee, and 16th hole to the 17th tee, but nothing too bad.

-Neutral design, doesn't particularly favor lefties, righties, forehands, backhands, even rollers in play. Many holes are open enough to allow any shape shots, but some require accuracy with a few different approach lines to the basket.

-Low chance to lose discs. Not a bad course to introduce beginners to the game if they can avoid getting too frustrated by the distance.

-A good long walk but without much elevation it's not punishing when it's not too hot and humid.

-Interesting old farm equipment sprinkled around the course. Doesn't really come in to play on shots (maybe on hole 14 if you throw too low and left...). On a beautiful spring day, it was a joy to be in the park, a very attractive course.

-Hole 17 is the "signature hole" to me... a beautiful and challenging par three with a picturesque waterfall framing the right side of the hole and a line of trees to the left. The short basket is 290' but before you card that birdie, you're going to have to hit a tight line. The long at 427' will take some courage on a right-hand backhand, your disc is going to be over the waterfall for much of the flight.

-Excellent town park with flush toilets, camp sites, a pool, fishing, and lots of other non-disc golf activities for the family. Lots of stone and cedar fencing at the edge of the fairways in many spots.

-Holes well separated, though a couple of points on the course can create safety issues if someone griplocks at drive at the wrong time. When I was teeing off on 11 someone threw a wayward roller off the 10th tee that rolled just behind me, and the drive to 8 short can come a little close to the 7th basket for my comfort. Just a bit of awareness and courtesy can avoid any issues. The course stays well away from other park activity, though a couple of older ladies were sunning themselves by the waterfall on 17 and seemed clueless about what was going on in the park with disc golf. When I tried to explain that they would have to move for players playing the long basket, they seemed a bit incredulous and stated that this was the spot where all of the "wedding couples" had portraits made. I can see some conflict on some future tournament during wedding season?

Cons:

-With only one tee and one basket for most holes, the course is a fun open bomber for big arms, but can be a bit frustrating for me, a middle of the pack MA-65 senior. Very few birdie chances, and a few of the longer holes were nearly an automatic bogey for me. On EVERY hole I threw my favorite slightly overstable driver. Not an "every disc in the bag" kind of course, I could have played with my go-to driver, a Buzz, and my putter.

-On most holes a 200' drive left me with a mid or another overstable driver shot, often to circle three (64'+), with a short approach and drop in bogey. I loved that there are short baskets on six holes but I'd love to see "Short Tees" on a few of the longer Par Threes to make this course more rec-friendly: those four 400+' par 3s come to mind. The way I dealt with it was to treat those holes are par fours. I know people will argue that "Par Doesn't matter", but at the end of the day it is much easier on my fragile ego to say I was "a couple over par" than to say "double digits over par".

-The course is mostly flat and the design (thankfully) avoids the pond, so no water features to add variety and challenge to the round other than that beautiful waterfall on 17. That said, I think the designer did a masterful job given the property he had to work with.

-The park has benches and picnic tables and pavilions, but no benches or trash cans on the tees. This park is brand new, just opened within the past two weeks, I'm guessing this will improve over time.

-Northern Alabama can have heat, humidity, wind, tornadoes, snakes, fire ants, flying bugs, man-eating vines(?) for most of the year. Pay attention to the weather forecast, wear solid shoes and use some common sense when reaching for a disc if you are off the fairway.

-Gun range on the property. I got used to it pretty quickly, but the first bang can be startling.

Other Thoughts:

-At 6,690' from the shorts, par 57. From longs it's 7,706 par 58. Hole 13 is the shortest on the course at 261 feet. Two holes measure over 600' on the longs, the longest on the short layout is just over 500'.

Sharon Johnston was a brilliant, accomplished, and beautiful local woman whose family owned the property and donated it in her memory when she died while stunt flying at an airshow. I'd like to think she'd approve of us flying frisbees across the property.
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