Pros:
Good variety and scenery for such a small course. Holes 2-8 of the course play through a beautiful, serene forest and offer a variety of technical shots. There are uphill and downhill shots and some that seem more forehand or lefty friendly and some that favor RHBH. However, quite a few of the holes have a choice of lines to throw off the tee.
Hole 1 makes the (short) journey to the woods and hole 9 emerges to an open-ish pin position back in sight of the parking lot. Both have obstacles to circumvent.
The flow of the course is intuitive, the baskets are new DGA Mach 5s, the rubber tee pads are serviceable, and the signage is descriptive. All well-done for a smaller nine-hole church course.
There is an open field for warm-up or practice and plentiful parking within sight of tee one.
Cons:
Overall distance is the biggest drawback. The course is short. Some will play it with just a putter. I threw several different discs off the tees, but nothing high speed.
Every hole is birdie-able by most experienced players, but there are some tight lines in places, not just open shots that require distance control.
For such a short course, it has quite a few fairly long walks between holes. It's an enjoyable area to walk in, so I didn't mind, but some may find it annoying.
Though I found the course navigation to be intuitive, everyone might not think so and I did not see any directional signage on the course or a course overview map.
Other Thoughts:
I enjoyed this course on a cool spring afternoon with the sunshine beaming through the leaves of the trees. The natural beauty is a definite plus and the variety of shots required to score well would make this a good course for a new player to learn on and develop a well-rounded woods game.
As short niners go, this is one of my favorites.