I personally think this is in the TOP TWO of Sierra courses. There is one other out there that I'll let you do the searching for, it's relatively new, and nothing short of mind blowing.
But anyway, the reason I love this course so much is two-fold: it is so beautiful and so much fun. If you aren't playing up to your desired level, stop and take a look around with a nice deep breath: now that's living! The surrounding mountains and ridge-lines are some of the most serene the Sierras have to offer. The environment is also rather uncommon. It is a mix of high desert brush and mature pine trees, a combination which isn't rare per se, but the amount of pine trees here is higher than what you'd normally see in that ecosystem.
I will have to admit, a lot of the lines you have to hit are fairly generous in their spacing. There aren't really any super-tight wooded shots like you would see in other areas and I'm OK with that. Why? Because many of the shots still require PLENTY of power to land the birdie-two. Take hole 6 for instance: it requires lacing between two main guardian trees about 150' from the teepad, but you still have another 250' or so to get to the basket after that, so it requires about 400' power to get there (in the long position.) If you're one to just play for par, you may find this somewhat boring, but smashing one, having it slowly flip up, hitting that line, and having a look at two on that hole is one of the funnest things about disc golf to me. There are at least four holes that are "must get" birdie-twos if you're that kind of player (Holes 2, 3, 8, 10, 15 or 16 come to mind.) They are mostly open, minor shot-shaping holes with the basket in plain site less than 300' away (depending on pin position.) On the other hand there are several holes that are well over 400'. Some are fairly open, some are not: particularly hole 11, a 700'+ hole that has a fairway that seems to bottleneck the further you go down a dogleg left. This hole will majorly punish you if drill a tree and kick in the wrong direction, as it is one of the most densely wooded parts of the course. Be prepared for a big number on this hole.
To be clear, if you have someway, somehow mastered the slow, gentle turnover shot that lands flat, the single hardest shot to master in disc golf (regardless of throwing style) this course will do what it can to pay off. At times, depending on the pin position, the course basically flips you the bird and sees what you can do to land a 3, let alone 2. High caliber flex shots can be rewarded.
Reading the signs and seeing what they call a 3 on some of the holes borders on absurd (to me.)
Hole 13 deep right is a par 3 and man, you better flip up dead straight for a while, have it *slowly* continue to hold the turn, and then hit the upshot from there.
I'm not as good as I thought after playing this course when it's in a bad mood (trust me, if she's windy and in long pins, even the elite would get frustrated.) It can whip your ego into shape real quick if it wants.
Championship level stuff out there depending on layout.
Anyways, the course wraps up with the final holes giving you some more room to absolutely smash your furthest flying discs, as the fairways open up, but sit in that 450'-600'+ range. 18 is uphill with plenty of room but clear road OB.
If this course had a little more variety in scenery, and one or two more holes that were in that "super-tight" fairway class, I would seriously consider this a 5-star course. It's that good. The designers and locals could not have done a better job. Thank you guys.
So, if you are a hyzer-flip wizard with both 400'+ power and a big forehand, you will do great here. But with that skill set you should play pro! As for me, I get more than my fill of wooded line-hitting shots on this course. I get to smash drives with 100% power, and potentially get rewarded for doing so. I get to hit big lines through woods. I get to breathe in the fresh Sierra air, and hear that Sierra breeze which creates that distinct hum among the pines.
This course is an island unto itself. It is my get away, a home away from home. Immensely recommended.