Pros:
This course is built on an interesting tract of land that includes tall mountain forest, open meadow, a deep bisecting creek, and rolling terrain. A great combination for disc golf.
The holes lengths vary nicely from 194' to 478', with a selection of flat, uphill and downhill holes. Hole 8 is a fun downhill toss to a basket set across the creek. Hole 16 stands out as playing steeply uphill, with Hole 17 playing back down.
Many of the holes play through the forest with gaps to hit and lines to shape. But a few play across more open ground and allow you to air it out a bit.
Baskets are in good shape, and show up reasonably well. There are a few tricky basket locations next to the creek or on slopes or mounds.
Cons:
Natural teepads and lack of tee signs are the biggest negative. There is a post at each teepad with the hole number, but that is all. Many of the baskets are blind from the tee, and a hole diagram would be useful to help you figure out the hole. As it is you will be walking forward on quite a few holes to determine the location of the basket.
The area has been left natural, which is not a bad thing, but especially in the open areas you will be throwing into tall grass, so keep on eye on where your disc lands.
The tract of land with the disc golf course also includes some other utility/industrial installations for the Inn. So you will encounter fencing, pipeline, discarded equipment, and on one hole huge piles of broken up concrete with rebar. The course would benefit from some cleaning up but it appears that this is a multi-use area so that might not happen, or could even get worse. Once an area starts getting used as a dump it is seldom reversed.
Other Thoughts:
The disc golf holes themselves are very good, but the overall experience suffers from the lack of teepads/signs and poor overall maintenance.