Pros:
There are three courses at Lindsey Park, and they're all great, and all for different reasons. And how can you tell which course you're on? Well just look at the color of the DiscCatcher basket you're throwing to! If three courses of custom color Discatchers isn't amazing, I don't know what is.
Full Disclosure: I only played about half the Blue Course, it was my 4th 18 holer of the day, and it was about to rain. I played 1, couldn't find 2, so went to 10 and then crossed the road for 11-17, and then 18. I got some looks at the other holes, but it started raining so I didn't play the rest. But what I DID play, and could see, was pretty amazing.
The part of this park this course plays on is a mix of gentle elevation, to extreme. A few times you play straight uphill, or straight downhill, which honestly might be more difficult. At least mentally, not throwing 100ft into the air on a steep hill and hyzering waaay out is not something I get to practice, so this course gave me a great opportunity to experience that.
Every hole has a short and long tee, both concrete and in good condition. The tee sign is going to be at the shorter tee. I don't usually put this in a review, but I really liked the tee signs here. It doesn't add much to your experience, but it added enough to mine that I figure it's worth mentioning. Also, all three courses have the same style sign, so maybe they just grew on me by the time I got to my third course.
This course is a great compliment to the long and technical Gold Course, and the shorter Red Course. There are enough trees to influence your lines, but not enough to automatically give you a bogey if you miss your line. This course also makes good use of space, giving every hole ample room despite sharing some field space. I never felt right up against another hole, or in danger of throwing into another fairway.
The trees through the park are old and large. The accumulation of the whole experience is always augmented by some beautiful scenery.
Cons:
Obviously navigation could be better because I just couldn't find hole 2. And I looked HARD before looking at the weather and just deciding to move on to 10. After that it was preeetty easy, but still took a little searching. Kind of a theme for every course.
I think what really keeps this from being a 4 is just the lack of that amazing factor where you feel #blessed to be playing the course. I was looking for that on Gold, given it's high rating, but came closest to it on Red and Blue. But there are no particularly beautiful holes, or seeing something that's never been done before. If I go back and find maybe a few more technical holes I missed this time, I may bump it up to a 4.
Other Thoughts:
I loved playing what little bit of this course I did. If I go back through Tyler in the future, I would love to play this course first, then the Red.
I said this in my Review of Red, but it really is amazing to have three high quality courses in the same park. And it is further amazing that each hole have top of the line baskets, multiple concrete pads, and good signage. The investment in this course and the experiences of the disc golfers is noticeable, and staggering. The only other thing like it are places that are dedicated to having one top-of-the-line course, but for a community, this is absolutely amazing. I would love to go to a three round tournament here where every round was a different course. But then again that might make parking an issue...
Definitely play if you're driving through! At least one, but as many of the three courses as you can. (and no, I won't tell you which one!)