Pros:
The grounds here used to be a major amusement park back from 1889 until 1927, complete with a large wooden roller coaster, swimming pool and a small zoo. Now it's part of a revitalization project in the neighborhood. It now features a swimming pool, ball fields, skate park (Another strange choice for an inner city park?) and an excellent themed children's playground. The theme of which is zoo animals, which harkens back to the turn of the century and the zoo that once stood here.
The course has concrete teepads, DGA baskets (most of which have the red # on top) and seven holes have the old school fiberglass tee signs. Don't be misled by the distances on the signs, both # 4 and # 7 are currently about 200' shorter the listed distance. The course is totally flat but mature trees do add some challenge to most holes.
The course starts beside the baseball field. This tee pad does not have a tee sign. After that, navigation is fairly easy and instinctive. # 5 is a very short (175') ACE run. There is a Mando on # 8.
Cons:
Kinda tricky finding the # 1 teepad.
Tee signs missing on # 1 and # 8.
Some baskets have numbers on top, others don't.
# 8 tee pad is right next to the on-going dice/card game.
Sketchy neighborhood, homeless guys.
Other Thoughts:
This is fun little course. I have to question the wisdom of building a course here in the inner city. I don't envision disc golf replacing basketball anytime soon here in the hood. I felt perfectly secure playing this course at 11 am on a Monday morn but probably wouldn't be comfortable trying to finish my round as the sun goes down or on a busy weekend day, either.