Pros:
Having a Burger King within a disc's throw of basket-5, and not too far from baskets 9 and 18, is quite convenient.
Baskets and signs in good shape.
Cons:
Roads, walking paths, parking lots, fences possibly come into play on a number of the holes.
Other Thoughts:
The course is located in sections of open space located between crossroads, and near athletic fields, of a military base. The course uses what little elevation changes and obstacles (scattered large trees) that it has, but it is fairly flat and open. The first five holes are a bit jammed together, with some definite cross-fairway potential, and, ignoring number-7, the front nine averages ~250' in length. The newer back nine is much more spread out, and the holes are longer than those on the front, maybe by 75'~100'. The increase in trees forces some shot-shaping, but the back continues the flat theme.
The map is quite good for navigating the front nine. Until/unless someone creates a map of the back nine, the white-painted spoke on a basket will point you in the direction of the next tee. From tee-9, if you look towards the hardwoods to your right, you may see basket-18. Tee-10 is located to the right of basket-9, and basket-10 is towards the corner where right-field and the track meet, so you end up throwing across fairway-8. From basket-10, the course runs in more-or-less a counterclockwise fashion, crossing roads a few times
Teesigns and flush-to-ground coloured boards will identify the natural tee locations. Holes 14 and 18 have two tees. The lengths from the short tees are similar to the remainder of the holes, while the two longs tees add a lot of length.
If accuracy from 300' and in is your strength, you should have a few ace runs and multiple birdy chances, as nearly all the holes fit that description. Quite suitable for beginners.