Pros:
For those of you who've never been to Yellow Springs, you know how folks visit Amish, Mennonite, or Quaker communities in PA, OH & IN? Often, it's kind of like a visit to a place frozen in time. Well, Yellow Springs is like somebody scooped up a California hippie community in 1966-67 and plopped it down in rural Ohio, then sealed it in a little time bottle. I lived near here in 1970, and it feels like it still has the same vibe. It is truly an interesting little town to visit. Even the little Mills Lawn Elementary school has a hippie mural with peace signs in a park-like playground surrounded by front porch style houses. They've just built a cute little disc golf course for the kids there, as well.
The course has neat, hand-painted tee signs and map, natural grass tees, and the newest basket design in the area, the Predator, with its shark fin top pointing to the next tee, and its curved over basket lip that keeps bounce-outs, ...well, in. The interesting thing is the community put in these wonderful baskets on a true Par 2 course. It's a great, rewarding place for primary grade students to learn the game with their families, teachers and classmates. All holes are forgiving, and most are safely laid out for wild beginner throws. The sixth hole actually forces a little line shaping around a younger tree and under a more established one. Overall, this course is a fun place to practice putter upshots for ace runs.
Cons:
The lack of distance (& elevation, & obstacles) will deter any real reason to come into town just for the disc golf: holes range from 70' to 192', and if you take more than 20 strokes to complete the nine holes, you might feel let down. The tees are natural turf and toe boards, but anything more involved would be overkill. Most holes play safely, but the ninth finished between three pieces of playground equipment, and overzealous kids should be monitored on their throws there. Obviously not intended to be played when the playground or park is in use, or school is in session.