Pros:
This review will likely be a work in progress of sorts, as the course is near my home, and is slowly coming into its own. It's been installed for a few months however, and I figured it would be good to get this course a rating, and on central Illinois' radar.
- Wonderfully manicured park, which has been as such for years before this course was installed. Restrooms, walking/biking paths, fishing, ball fields, you name it. Ample parking and easy to get to as well.
- As such, the course has specifically been designed as to not interfere with the majority of activities. It has been magnificently overlaid into an already popular park setting to even further increase the usefulness of the park.
- Great 6'x12' concrete pads on every hole, even the shorter ones.
- Great, properly installed Mach X baskets.
- Great signage all over the course, including a large course map kiosk at #1. This is a great location as well, because the times you might get turned around on where to go next are after #7 and after #9, which are right there as well.
- 5 holes have alternate baskets, permanently installed. All provide a little more length, and a slightly different look. They are the blue powder-coated baskets.
- Hole-type variety is abundant here. Multiple holes crossing creeks or small drainage areas, a long pond carry, short woodsy holes, wide open bombers. A good handful of par 4s and even a very long par 5 in hole 13's longest layout.
- The front 9 and back nine loop nicely, which is always a little bonus.
- #2 Although short, this is a fun looking hole with a generally listless creek in play on the right side. Can be an easy RHBH hyzer birdie, if you don't let the water get in your head. For those not wishing to push their luck, there's plenty of open fairway to the left.
- #13 This is the signature hole on the course. Length, difficulty, and quite picturesque. Two tees and two baskets, the short tee requires a solid 210 ft drive to clear the water, but has dangerous water beyond that to the left that's in play as well. The long tee requires a solid 375 ft drive to safely clear the pond if you go for it. Great risk/reward design.
- #14 While not difficult or long, this is a really picturesque looking hole that tees off across the little drainage creek that runs into the pond.
Cons:
- The first few times I played this course, I was disappointed in the shot-shape repetitiveness of the front 9's drives. I think the front 9 is very advantageous to lefties with a strong backhand. I find myself wanting to drive RHFH on the first 4 holes, as well as #6 and #8. A good technical RHBH anhyzer shot is useful on a couple of these if you have it, but I can see this front 9 being frustrating for some.
- If you don't pay attention to the signage, navigation is not easy. However, this does not mean that the course flow is bad. If you look at the map you can see that it actually flows nicely. Just not intuitively.
- #3 A very frustrating hole that really requires a 250 ft, L-R skip shot to even sniff a deuce. Lined by many larger trees to the right, with a line of smaller trees to the left that eliminates most intuitive shots. Essentially not very deuce-able unless you get a perfect roller, or are an upper crust player.
- #4 Similar to hole 3, a downhill L-R shot that currently has such a low green ceiling that only a hard skip shot or a roller will get you within 50 ft. This hole may break in with time.
- #7 Just a wide open, 360 ft bomber that plays slightly uphill. Obviously here for 1) variety and 2) necessity, but still not much going for it. A well-placed tree or two on this hole would do wonders.
- #17 This par 3 has mostly been cleared out for its intended design, but it still requires a layup. A pretty small window off the tee eliminates the chance to shape a huge R-L hyzer that's required to cross the creek 200 ft out and to the left. Best chance at a birdie requires a 60 ft approach across the creek.
Other Thoughts:
- In general, the front 9 of this course is tucked into wooded areas, and is quite a bit shorter when compared to the back 9.
- Not particularly a pro or a con, but I do find myself using rollers off the tee pad on a handful of holes. This may change as more fairway trees are trimmed or broken in.
- This course is going break in just fine, and is a huge attraction for Forsyth and the Decatur Area. Nice job by the city council for realizing this opportunity for their community, and committing to doing it right.
- I look forward to playing this course in years to come, and updating this review as the course comes into its own.
(EDIT): As I surmised, this course has really come into its own after its first year. Between the amount of play it gets, league nights, the local club (DDGC), and hosting tournaments, the course has really matured into a delightful course. It simply just has a little taste of everything. Fun wide open bombing, tight and technical woods, OB streams, a pond carry, ace opportunities, and plenty of shot types. About the only thing missing is some major elevation, but even with that they've done what they can (4, 6, 7, 11, 12, 14, 18). As for my former qualms about a repetitive front 9 - some of that still holds true, but plenty of new drive lines and possibilities have opened up in the last year, between repeated play and cleanup of a lot of the rough. This course really is worth the trip if you're in Central Illinois. And now with 36 solid holes of disc golf in the Decatur Area, you might as well make a trip of it. **Rating moved from 3.5 to 4**