Pros:
-A heavily wooded 9-hole course behind a recreation center with elevation. The long tees required skill level shot making with tight gaps and fairways, and basket placements in gully's making them a hard reach. Short tees more manageable.
-Tee signs are located at the short tee's with hole number, par and distance for both tees, next hole direction and a hole map. Baskets catch well.
-A unusual object bordering #3 left fairway, a boat.
-Threw from the long tees mid's, fairways, and drivers.
-Navigation is clockwise had no problem locating next tee on the firm trails except for #4.
-Beginners and Recreation will find the course very challenging with narrow fairways. Intermediate and Advanced players will find a challenge from the long tees.
Cons:
-The course is repetitive a few of the holes have the same look whether it's a basket placement in a gully portion of a fairway, or a gap look from the long tee. Two months after playing the course some holes are not memorable, which is a rarity for myself on a 9-holer.
-Most tee pads are carpet and have become worn out or just wrinkled up. A few not useable due to lumps on the teeing area. A few tees just couldn't get comfortable on especially # 2 with lump's and #8 with the carpet a stringy mess with sand on the tee.
-No. 4 long tee I could not locate but found a section on the trail that looked like a carpet may have once been there and the distance was close enough, so I used it.
-Tee signs some are fading and look ragged.
-There can be walkers on the trails, I waited a few moments on #9 for two to clear.
-Disc loss potential is high with a few blind shots that could disappear in heavy rough behind trees and bushes. I played late October and it was a concern and could imagine far more difficult to find a disc with full foliage. Spent a few minutes looking for my disc on #2.
Other Thoughts:
Despite what felt like some repetition playing Betty Queen, I found the course to be very challenging from the longs with the tight gaps off the tee and narrow fairways. It was a big switch from the open fairways of Orange County played earlier that morning. Betty Queen can be a teaching course for most players, and if I lived in the area, I would play here often to keep my woods game Sharpe. My biggest con was just not getting comfortable on some of the tee pads, need to be replaced or find another way.
My biggest plus for the course is that I found the course able to keep my attention with a challenge that it presented and providing a good game of woods golf, my overall rating is anchored on a 4.0. The time to play including some disc looking on #2 was 35 minutes.
The Boat on the Fairway:
No. 3 at 269 feet longs is an elevated tee dipping down to a gully then back up hill on a lazy dogleg right at about 190 feet. At that same distance sitting in a cluster of trees on the left is a children's oversized boat to climb on about 5 feet high and 20 feet long. The top of the boat is sealed with plywood. I was trying to make the dogleg with no thought of hitting the boat but held the disc too long. Somehow made the tree gap to the boat, skipped off the top deck plywood and traveled about 30 feet hitting a tree. I thought the scene was comical and doubt I could ever do it again purposely.
Notable Hole:
No. 9 Par 3 Longs at 370 feet is a downhill narrow fairway with heavy trees all the way down to a dogleg left with a 35-degree turn, and at about 240 feet. The gap at the turn is about 25 feet. The basket sits in a gully with a few guardian trees. The fairway slides left to right, miss the dogleg and you may run your disc into heavy brush, make the dogleg and just hope it stays on fairway. I hit a good tree after running thru the fairway.
Signature Hole:
No. 2 Par 3 Longs at 310 feet is a downhill open tee to a gap about 120 feet out into a dark canopy with heavy woods and brush. It's a window gap about 20 feet wide, and the fairway slides right to left at the bottom to a gully. About 100 feet from basket a slight dogleg right to a basket with a few guardian trees on the left and at the bottom of a gully. Teed my disc to the left and watched it disappear into the darkness. Listen for any hit trees and heard nothing. Did a slow walk on the left in the rough and found my disc almost basket high and had a line thru the split of two trees for a C2 putt.
Trouble Hole:
No. 8 Par 3 Longs at 325 feet is straight uphill adding on some distance. The fairway is open enough at about 45 feet wide until about the 180-foot mark and closes with a 20-foot gap, at that point the fairway starts a 45-degree dogleg left, but there are protruding trees bulging out at C1 on the left to give the basket protection with a hook left. The basket sits open. All along the left is very heavy brush, and I thought the biggest potential for a lost disc. From the tee a long hall uphill for the entire distance. I decided to hug the left fairway and hit the tee sign at the short tee. With an uphill 180 feet to go I threw one of my best turnovers, made the gap and dogleg found myself basket high for a 20-foot putt, and miss it. I would have loved to of had that par.