Pros:
Deerfield Park is located just west of Mt. Pleasant, MI and contains two 18-hole courses. This review is for the "Wildwood" course, and the other course on site is "Deerfield". Disclaimer: These courses are similar, so large portions of this review are copied and pasted from the Deerfield course review that I just wrote a few days ago! I will end with a comparison.
The Wildwood course provides a fun round of disc golf that will be suitable and interesting for a variety of skill levels. The first ten holes play in a forest, with many tight fairways cut through the trees. Elevation changes pose additional challenge throughout this part of the course. The last hole in this section is a 380' fairway (from the long tee) that slopes downward at first but quickly flattens out, then cuts 90 degrees sharply to the left about halfway through. A large pine tree on the far side of the fairway at this turn adds to the aesthetic (and catches discs that miss the line). The basket is perched on a slope off the right side of the fairway that is decorated with ornamental rocks.
After a longish walk, you'll reach a second hole that I liked a lot. Hole 11 is another sharp left turn, but this time you're throwing down a more open valley. Only a couple of trees are in the way - but stray off the fairway and there is thick rough on either side. The basket is up and over the other side of the valley, hidden an arm's length behind another tree. The remaining holes continue with the "more open, but thick rough off the fairway" theme. There are a couple of opportunities to air out longer drives.
The last hole on the course offers a water carry across a small pond. The carry is maybe 200' from the long tee or 100' from the short tee. A few trees ominously stand guard around the edges of the pond. I threw poorly and watched my disc get caught up in one of the trees, lose all momentum, and nosedive into the center of the pond. Those nervous about doing something similar can lay up off to the right, where there is open grass.
The tee pads are concrete and have "Wildwood" engraved into the front of them, which is a nice touch. There are two pads per hole, creating a long and short layout. I played a single round from the long layout. From the longs, this course is not overwhelmingly lengthy but decent power will help - and you will need to be accurate on the shorter wooded holes to score well. I would say the longs play at an intermediate level. The short layout looked like it would be more accessible to newer players, while offering a few different lines to baskets.
The baskets are Chainstars. In the woods, I do prefer the visibility of the yellow banded DISCatchers that the Deerfield course has. But these are fine too. One per hole.
Navigational signage is good. There are tons of "Next Tee" signs and they are all large, well made, and color coded by course (green for Wildwood and brown for Deerfield course). If you look at the map, you can see that the two courses are not just adjacent but actually "overlapping". I'm putting that in quotes because I'm not sure what word to use - the overall footprints of the two courses overlap, but individual holes do not. What I'm trying to say is, this could easily be very confusing - if not unsafe - but the color coded signs are good enough to completely prevent this. There are a couple of long walks between holes, but it is always very clear where to go.
There is a large kiosk at the parking lot that has maps of both courses on site, as well as a weatherproof box with scorecards inside. A couple of restrooms exist in the park, though it isn't obvious where either one is from the disc golf parking lot (closest one is tucked into the woods next to Deerfield course hole 18's fairway). There are many benches at long tees, and a few trash cans spaced throughout the course.
Cons:
The tee signs are just green painted plaques with the hole number, distance, and par (Deerfield course has the same plaques but painted brown). These do appear at both long and short tee pads and they are well constructed, but with so many blind holes I would have really appreciated a hole map or at least a rough line drawn on these signs. I didn't need the course map for navigating between holes, but I found myself referring to it many times just to figure out which way fairways turned. It got frustrating having to pull out the map on my phone and/or walk down the fairway to find the basket on hole after hole. I would also like to see "long"/"short" or similar language added to the tee signs.
Hole 14 ends near the park road. Errant drives or approach shots could easily land in the road.
I was having deja vu (back to the Deerfield course I had played earlier in the day) as I played the last few holes of Wildwood. The ending holes are flatter than the rest of the course, and not memorable other than one water carry mixed in. It seemed like the rough was thicker around this area than anywhere else in the park too - disc loss is definitely possible in the summer.
There was no practice basket, and plenty of room to add one!
Road noise from M-20 can be heard throughout the course, detracting from the aesthetic a little bit.
Other Thoughts:
There is a $6/day fee to enter the park, payable at a staffed entrance station. Credit cards accepted!
The two courses here at Deerfield Park seem very comparable to me. They offer similar challenges in terms of distances, elevation changes, mix of wooded vs. semi-open holes, and even the presence of a single water carry on each course. I finished with roughly the same number of throws on both courses. "More of the same" is not a bad thing in this case, since both courses are solid. I wrote in my Deerfield course review that my actual rating of that one fell just below a 3.75, so I rounded down to 3.5. I think that Wildwood is very slightly better due to a couple of holes that were a bit more memorable for me, and fewer safety concerns. I see that as just enough to push this one over the 3.75 threshold, so this time I'm rounding up to 4.0.
If I understand DGCR and am calculating correctly, this 11th review of Wildwood is going to push it into visibility somewhere in the listing of Michigan's top 5 courses - just behind Deerfield course. To repeat myself from that review one more time, I'm not convinced that either of these courses are quite as good as the ratings would indicate. Deerfield Park is very nice - but more at the level of other solid local destinations like Northend Riverside Park in Big Rapids, not at the level of Michigan's very best courses.
Don't expect to be blown away, but if you're a disc golfer within a couple hour's drive Deerfield Park is definitely worth an afternoon of your time - or even a full day trip!