HOLE BREAKDOWN: (Assume right-handed shots) Also, bring/download a map. Navigation is not possible without one.
Hole 1 is the best hole on the course. Fair wooded tunnel that requires a 200-foot straight shot.
Hole 2 has a similar tunnel to hole 1 for most of the fairway, but then hits a huge group of trees by the basket. Get to those trees and you'll have a 30 - 45 foot putt.
Hole 3 is where the frustration started for me. The fairway tunnel bends slightly right, before cutting back hard to the left. Use a putter to land in the fairway. You need to make it right enough around the bend to have a shot into the green.
Hole 4 is a longer left bending fairway. Around 180 feet straight to a left fade. Once you start fading you need to push 100 feet into the tunnel to reach the basket.
Hole 5 is one of the better holes on the course. This one feels fair. This requires a straight to left fading shot through a tunnel. The disc needs to get moving left around 150 feet into the flight to bend with the fairway. There's a handful of trees to miss about 30 feet from the basket if you want to park this one.
Hole 6 is close to a good hole, but there are just a few too many trees in the way. If you're playing for 3, a straight shot will get you in position to pitch up to the green. To park this one, you'll need to hyzer flip a forehand and get it to fade out a bit at the end. This would be extremely difficult based on the space in the fairway.
Hole 7 is a bad hole, but the concept is good. It's a ridiculously tight tunnel, less than 10 feet wide, but there's no overhang. It's a 333 foot Par 5, which should be a par 3, maybe par 4. The problem with this hole is the tee pad location. It's offset to the left of the start of the tunnel, forcing you to throw high to make it around the corner into the tunnel. So, you need to throw straight, but you can't based on where the tee pad is. The right side of the fairway is dense with a creek running through it. The left side is all tight wood line. The green is a small cove surrounded by trees. If you get off the fairway here, you're pitching out. I threw an Innova Dart off the tee to stay in the fairway.
Hole 8 feels very similar to Hole 7. It's shorter, but you're essentially throwing down the tight tunnel hoping your disc makes it to / stops in the gap to the left where you can find the basket. A skip shot could get you under the basket, but that would be a risky shot with the tight fairway. You can't see the gap to the basket off the tee.
Hole 9 would need a sick RHBH flex shot to get under the basket. The fairway forces you left first, then cuts back right midway through the flight and moves straight toward the end. This is a good hole design, but there are a few too many trees in the way to try the flex shot. Making this a two-shot hole makes more sense.
Hole 10, I honestly don't remember. Sorry, all. A lot of these holes have a very similar feel to them. The photos on DGCR show a shot that moves left to right and likely requires you to push far forward to reach the basket.
Hole 11 has a tree that's fallen down overhanging the fairway. The tee pad is slightly elevated, which makes the overhanging tree trunk even worse. You really can't throw straight and over it, so you need to throw under it. The fairway moves left early, probably 100 - 150 feet into the throw, and then goes straight after the bend. In my opinion, the best way to drive on this hole is to throw a forehand shot from your knee. You're lower to the ground, and a forehand shot releases from your hip rather than your shoulders. If you're right-handed, the odds of driving more than half the fairway are slim with this play, unless you turn it over perfectly. But, it's better than smacking that overhanding tree and basically progressing 30 feet.
Hole 12 is another hole I don't remember. Sorry again, all. Last one of those on this list.
Hole 13 has the tee out in a field with a tree line on your left. You follow that tree line straight ahead into a cove that fades left. You need to throw straight here and fade as you get to the cove/gap. If you throw something overstable and fade into the gap, you won't push forward enough to get to the basket.
Hole 14 is another tight wooded hole. This has a pretty tight gap off the tee. Push forward and start fading just before the trees right in front of you. This has the same feel as most of the course.
Hole 15 is the first of two open field holes. You won't see the basket from the tee, but walk right from the tee pad and you'll be able to see the basket bumped up right next to the tree line. This is a right-hand backhand hyzer shot. The tree line is a good obstacle here. You need to throw wide enough around it, but you don't want to throw too wide or you won't make it back to the pin. This basket is tight to the tree line, so if you fade too far left, you may have a tricky putt.
Hole 16 feels completely different than most of the course, and it's a better version of Hole 15. You throw through a good size gap out into the field, and you're looking to get at least 300 feet of distance. The basket is to your left from the tee, built into a cove in the tree line. The basket is pretty deep in there, probably 50 feet or so. This is the one hole that feels like a par 4. The mistake off the tee is to finish too far left near the tree line. If you finish straight or right from the tee, you should be able to see the gap to the basket and have an upshot to get your birdie.
Hole 17's fairway requires a slow fading shot to the left. The map shows two routes to the basket, but there's no right fading route there now. A great drive could get under the basket here, but again, there are a lot of trees to miss off the tee and not much space to stand next to the tee pad.
Hole 18 feels close to hole 1, but again there are too many trees in the fairway to get to the basket in one shot. The fairway requires you to move the disc slightly left to right midway through the hole, but it's straightforward after that. There's a walking path near the basket that you can take to walk back to the parking lot.