Kenosha, WI
UW Campus - Parkside Share
Uploaded By: timg Hole #2
3 / 213ft.   3 / 334ft. Par / Distance:
Hole #2 Pro Tee



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Reviews: 25
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 Great Blend of Holes

2-4    8/30/2009   9/6/2009
Review By: StrikerME02
Played: 13  Reviewed: 8  Exp: 5 Years
9 Helpful / 1 Not
Pros: This course is extremely well kept and clean right by a small university. There are two sets of concrete teepads for the majority of the first 18 holes. Just this year there were an extra 9 holes added (no concrete teepads, but at 27 holes what more can you want).

Great signage is present everywhere on this course and if it is your first time playing it is almost impossible to get lost (unless of course you head into the thick rough looking for your beloved disc).

The first few holes on the course are very open but with some heavy rough off to the side that you want to navigate around, or you may very well be searching for your disc a long time. It would be very helpful to send out a spotter in certain holes like these. Due to the more openness of these holes they provided very reachable deuces and some very exciting ace runs.

Hole #4 has to be one of the coolest holes on the course. The basket is placed on top of this mound of boulders/rocks a little over 300 ft straight out from the tee. After your drive, you get to make the decision if you want to go for the birdie putt and risk having your disc roll all the way down the borders, and be left for a tough par to save, or just lay up and easily get par.

Hole #5s long tee is also very interesting. The tee is elevated 10-15ft above the ground with rails along the side so you don't fall off of it after your release. This makes for a very tough drive as you are throwing from about the exact height of a bunch of trees leaves and if you try to go around them to much you will end up in the woods that runs along hole #5s right side. The shorter tee has no elevation and make for a much easier shot.

Many of the wooded holes in this course are not that long, but are very tough because they have extremely narrow fairways. Many people like to tomahawk their drives for these holes. The good tomahawkers usually get somewhere close to the basket and the basket and the ones who aren't so good will be spending some time looking for there discs. I recommend just throwing what you are comfortable with on these types of holes and always making sure you know where the basket is before you throw.

Hole #10 is one of the longest holes from the long tees on the course. The long tee starts out elevated on this hill and the basket plays to a slight right that you have to navigate you drive around some bushes scattered throughout the fairway without getting it lost in the thick rough on the right side of this hole. The short tee is located at the bottom of this hill, still around 300ft from the basket.
After Hole #10 the tougher woods holes come in to play with lots of trees engulfing many of the holes.

Hole #14 produces lots of ace runs from either of the tees as it goes straight through a medium-narrow sized farrow and takes a slight left into the open.Many of these ace runs com for RHBH players. In my 3 rounds I have played at this course. I have seen someone hit the chains and out in 2 of my 3 rounds. Very deuce-able.

Hole #16 plays of a tee that is placed right behind this hedge that makes driving very interesting as it force people to throw much higher than normal or over think some of their drives. Is a relatively short hole only somewhere around 250ft that doglegs to the right.

Hole #17 is also a pretty short hole, but much higher scores are seen on this hole as rolling hills and a tree canopy knock many drives down. I have found that the best approach for this hole is the release a very huge hyzer around everything and it will get somewhere around the basket if it doesn't get knocked down by a tree as it hyzering back.
Cons: There are very few cons on this course. Whenever I have played here the bugs have not been too bad.

You can lose a lot of discs in the rough if your the type of person that stops watching their disc as soon as they realize it's a bad drive.
Other Thoughts: This course is well suited for players of all ages and skill levels. The shorter tees make it still a very exciting course for the younger player, and produce tons of exciting ace runs for the more experienced. The long tees make this course an extremely challenging, while the distance might not seem too far the placement of the long tees and the areas you have to navigate around are key to the toughness of the longer tees.

This course is currently 27 holes. The disc golf club in this area already has plans to add an extra nine, they have the baskets just sitting inside waiting! The only problem is they need to get approval first. Once it is approved look to see UW Parkside as 36 hole course and cement itself as definitely one of the best in Wisconsin, and maybe even in the Midwest region.

If you are in the area you HAVE TO COME AND TRY OUT THIS COURSE. You will not be disappointed, I guarantee it.

There are also nice, clean bathrooms inside the school for use, and they sell new disc golf discs in the student bookstore(although the price is pretty expensive, ($18 for star plus tax is an additional fee).Mostly Innova brand, with all lines of plastic.

9 of 10 people found this review helpful.

 Lots of variety

2-4    8/30/2009   9/2/2009
Review By: mashnut
Played: 706  Reviewed: 693  Exp: 11.2 Years
This review was updated on 6/13/2010
11 Helpful / 1 Not
Pros: The course plays in an area of a college campus that is almost completely devoted to disc golf. The course occasionally comes close to roads and paths, but for the most part feels pretty isolated. There isn't a lot of elevation, but the variety of types of holes mostly makes up for this. There's a great mix of open holes where the wind is the main challenge, and tight wooded holes where accuracy counts.

There are various different lengths of holes, from ace runs to some where if you brave the wind you can air it out a little, especially from the back pads. Depending on the pin settings, there is a great variety of left and right turning shots that force you to use many different shots to score well. Many holes offer different lines that all offer different types of risk/reward decisions, and I like this kind of mental challenge on a course.

There are multiple pin positions on just about every hole on the main 18, and it looked like they often completely changed the hole. There were also dual pads on most of the holes, both nice concrete, and with their own tee signs. The signs were nice, with all the distances and layouts to the various alternate placements.

The area was very well taken care of, with no trash around, and nicely mowed fairways through the prairie grass areas of the course. A lot of work has obviously gone into this course, and it shows. The elevated pin and tee were some really cool added features that gave this course a little something special.
Cons: I'm not a huge fan of prairie grass rough, and there are some holes here where the main risk is losing your disc in tall grass. It doesn't really punish bad shots by costing you strokes, just time and possibly plastic. At least the course isn't all made up of the prairie type holes, but the hole design of just throwing straight ahead and working to stay out of the tall grass doesn't appeal to me.

The last time I played, there were some navigation issues, but apparently that has been resolved with better signage now. Some of the long or super-long tees were overgrown and didn't feel as well maintained, or perhaps just not as well used.
Other Thoughts: This course is a lot of fun to play, and offers something for every kind of player. It's worth the drive to play if you get the chance, though it seems like your best bet is to go on a weekend when parking is easier and classes won't be in session. I think it's awesome that a college campus has such a fantastic course exposing so many people to the sport.

Newer players will likely be frustrated by the difficulty of the course, though the distances are pretty reasonable from the short tees. More experienced players will have fun shooting for birdies from the short tees, and will find some fun challenges from the longs.

11 of 12 people found this review helpful.

 Mixed Review

1    8/7/2009   8/7/2009
Review By: heywillard90
Played: 23  Reviewed: 21  Exp: 5 Years
5 Helpful / 4 Not
Pros: Of the holes I found, this is how I felt:
-Extremely well manicured
-Great Accuracy challenge
-Well kept signs, pads and baskets and fairways
-Nature friendly course playing through tallgrass prairie and large woods
-Alternate tee pads at most holes
Cons: -Some extremely challenging shots that frustrated me (intermediate skills)
-Thin fairways cut out of prairie will make it very hard to find your disc if you dont keep it in
-A lot of short (low 200's) shots through a tunnel of woods which was not that amusing to me.
-I got lost many times trying to figure out where the next tee was.
-I had to feed a parking meter because I could not find any free public parking
Other Thoughts: As I read through the other reviews, it is obvious that I must have missed something. Perhaps there was alternate baskets and holes that I could have played for some more distance or open shots. But coming for the first time and not knowing the area, 3 is the score that this course gets. I feel that other players that come for the first time and do not know where all the baskets are would have similar issues. I can tell that much work has gone into this course and I know it is very popular with a lot of people in the area. It is important for the readers of this review to know that this is an initial reaction to just figuring out UW Parkside.

5 of 9 people found this review helpful.

East 9, Mighty fine

5+    7/30/2009   7/31/2009
Review By: clipnfly
Played: 60  Reviewed: 57  Exp: 3.9 Years
This review was updated on 8/17/2011
2 Helpful / 3 Not
Pros: Have been back here to play a few times since my orig review. Much better feel for the place now. Front 18 are truly a nice course. 1 - 5 play in the open with mowed fairways nicely carved from meadow. Sig basket on 4. Rough is just that, but not too bad that you will lose a disc. 6 is a hint of what is to come in the woods later on.7, 8, 9 are amongst the trees but not quite woodsy. 10 and 11 are back to mowed prairie. I made a donation on 10 of $15.95 in the form of a lost disc. I used the pro tee pad (nicely elevated). Disc went into rough just to left of shorter tee pad. Has my area code 847 phone number on it... If you find it. Discraft Xpress in crystal Z, yellow. Thank you for calling me to give it back. 12 thru 16 are all great woodsy holes. Liked the basket on 12 with its elevation. 17 and 18 play in the open and feel like afterthoughts just to finish 18 and get you back near the start. A few holes are aceable...many are definitely birdieable.
Cons: The addtl. back 9 is not fully developed. A nice bonus for some addtl. play, but not as complete as the front side. Not a lot to gripe about here in general… a few legit things. By comparison with so much good the gripes can seem petty, but as disc golfers we seek nirvana and look for little things.
Rough can eat discs as I did lose one today, but whose fault is that? Bugs can be bad in the woods, but knowing that and bringing spray you will be o.k. Mentioned earlier 17 and 18 are sort of afterthoughts, but the trees make for some option and hazard. No fun to have to pay to park. Not really paying to play, just playing to park. Hint… use the metered spaces and bring quarters instead of buying the pass.
Other Thoughts: This was my first course that is not a clean shot with some trees. More cut out of overgrown prairie. This has hedges and natural obstacles and blind shots and lots of optional approaches. Spotters recommended. Good fun. A must play. Discs available at bookstore in main building. Nice assortment, more than before, prices are standard.

2 of 5 people found this review helpful.

 best course in southern wi

5+    7/2/2009   7/2/2009
Review By: markfrolfs
Played: 6  Reviewed: 6
1 Helpful / 11 Not
Pros: this is the best course in southern WI testing your skill at the same time a great course to learn on. some unique holes and great atmosphere.
Cons: wooded parts can be harsh
Other Thoughts: i would recommend this course to anyone who appreciates disc golf

1 of 12 people found this review helpful.

 Nice Wooded Course

1    5/28/2009   5/28/2009
Review By: QbertPrime
Played: 32  Reviewed: 4  Exp: 9.8 Years
3 Helpful / 5 Not
Pros: Very well maintained. A wooded course that is still easy to play. I typically don't like wooded courses, but this one was a lot of fun.
Cons: I was a little confused on some of the tee boxes. I was not sure exactly which tees where the red, blue, or whites. Some holes had both red and blue on two different tee boxes. Maybe I am just not used to it being displayed this way. Not really a con, but it made the round a little confusing.
Other Thoughts: Overall a very good course. It I am ever near the Chicago area again I plan on playing this course another time.

3 of 8 people found this review helpful.

 One Not To Miss

1    5/10/2008   4/16/2009
Review By: tmgoff
Played: 43  Reviewed: 5  Exp: 21.2 Years
2 Helpful / 6 Not
Pros: The holes play distinct from on another. One or two of the tee locations are some of the most interesting I've shot from to date. And, if you can hit this course in the Spring everything is so frickin' green. Very, very nice. If you're in the area, don't miss this one.
Cons: Finding the fist tee can be a bit confusing. You'll want to circle all the way around the campus to the dorm area parking. You'll find the 1st tee and accompanying info board over a small rise directly beyound the parking area.

2 of 8 people found this review helpful.

 

2-4    4/15/2008   4/15/2009
Review By: sdecker
Played: 27  Reviewed: 16  Exp: 21.1 Years
3 Helpful / 5 Not
Pros: Really nice course. Well laid out and maintained and a good mix of shots is required.
Cons: None that I recall.
Other Thoughts: Played this course while visiting Chicago with friends and loved it. Heading back this summer and will happily make the 1 hour drive from Chicago to play it again.

3 of 8 people found this review helpful.

 Very Technical, Wonderfully Challenging

5+    4/13/2009   4/13/2009
Review By: Texconsinite
Played: 98  Reviewed: 76  Exp: 5.3 Years
This review was updated on 4/19/2009
12 Helpful / 0 Not
Pros: When I set foot on this course, I couldn't help but ask myself repeatedly, THIS is a College Course?? How can this be a free College Course?? Having only played UW-Whitewater before, the difference is like night and day.

Dual concrete tee pads on almost every hole, with a detailed Tee map at every tee, telling the distance of all basket placements from that tee. Trash cans attached to almost every tee sign. Woodchips under every basket. Multiple pin placements for almost every hole. Log benches and/or picnic tables at many tee pads.

This course delivers the goods. The multiple pin placements usually drastically change the holes. One usually bends it to the right, one to the left. Thus, its hard to say this course favors left or right more, as it is a function of where the pins are at any given time.

This course is one of the most technical I've played. It forces many strange shots through very tight gaps in the trees. Several holes had me scratching my head after a dozen rounds on the course. You can play some holes a different way every time for 10 rounds, and still not know which way is best.

This course has many holes that seem fairly short, under 300 ft from the short tees, yet the technical challenges make them much harder than the distance would indicate. There are no GIMME holes on this course. I have par'ed every hole on this course, but I have also bogey'ed every single one of them, and double bogied many. Some are harder than others for me, and some are easy for me that are hard for others.

This is a course that it really helps to have a wide variety of shots in your bag for. With all the weird lines you are forced to play, you'll need to pull many rabbits out of your hat to make pars on all of the holes.

The long tees, and the more open, longer holes in the field (especially #4) also bring distance into play, though big arms should not get too excited, as this course is still mostly about accuracy, even on the open holes. No amount of power will make up for precision and careful shot selection on this course, and the millions of tiny trees are tough to shoot out of.

The wind off the Lake is wicked, and makes the open holes tougher than they would seem. Paying attention to which way the wind is blowing is essential on this course, on all but the most heavily wooded holes. Failure to do so will put you in a world of hurt, especially putting.

This course features many very unique holes, including a terraced rock pile that makes for some of the most difficult putting you'll ever do, and a raised porch tee that changes the whole feel of the hole.

The whole course plays through the woods, with the first 5 holes in an open field, and the last 3 through scattered trees, which makes for a nice balance of tunnel shots and more open.
Cons: For all its diverse holes and technical challenges, this course is mostly flat. However, every scrap of terrain has been maximized, with some landscaping done to increase it. These are the areas where terrain comes into play or has been added to accentuate this shortcoming:
Hole 4s manmade concrete terrace pin adds elevation
Hole 5s Long Tee on the raised Deck makes for a cool (very) elevated tee.
Hole 10, already a hard hole, has a beautiful loooong tee elevated a foot high, which makes the wind even harder to overcome.
Hole 12 has a pin on a small hill that is very hard to putt on. Rollaways are very brutal
Hole 17 plays over several rolling hills with a low tree canopy limiting the window.

So, though the course is, on the whole, quite flat, but the terrain in play significantly impacts the holes. Also, if there were too much terrain in play, this course, already quite windy due to proximity to the Lake, might actually be too hard, so it works out.

There is very little water in play on this course, though there are some concrete OB sidewalks and roads, on at least 5 holes, which will punish errant shots. Also, there is a small river running through the brush on the right of hole 10, and a marsh in the brush to the left of holes 1 and 2, which can both cause unplayable lies if you end up there.

This course flows fairly well overall, though it is initially hard to find tee one from the parking lot (its on the left side of Inner Loop Road as you enter campus from Woods Rd/Hwy G) Also, for first-timers its slightly confusing transitioning between holes 6 & 7 (take a left through the woods), and getting to hole 12 from hole 11 (across the road).

In the setup I played, this course seemed to have many more left curves than right curves, but that was due to the pin placements they had in at the time, and not a permanent situation.

Though very technical, this course is fairly short from the short tees. I found myself driving with midranges on many holes. However, if this bothers you, the long tees add significant distance to many holes and force you bust out your drivers more.
Other Thoughts: Also, the Bookstore on campus sells discs, so check it out if you are in need of some plastic. Follow the main road into Campus (Inner Loop) past the front parking lot. Enter the double-doors of the first, all-glass building you see on the right. The bookstore is on your right as soon as you enter the doors.

The new nine holes across the street are a totally different feel, and since they are fairly far way from the normal 18 hole course, I refuse to consider them part of the same course. Nobody plays them as 27 holes by finishing each round on the 18 with a walk over to the new 9. It's doable, but a bit too far to make sense, especially when, from hole 18, you have to walk by Tee 1 to cross the street to new holes anyways, hence its a separate course, IMO. Also, the plan is to expand the new 9 to a full 18 by year's end, so once that happens, it will be a distinct, different course, and thus deserve a entry in DGCR and a separate review. Until then, its more like a Bonus 9 on the original course, but still deserves some kind of special treatment, which brings me to:

BONUS 9 "Prairieside" REVIEW (3.0/5.0)
Nice new baskets are in good shape, same double-chain style as original 18. A few of them are numbered. Dual tees are dirt. Long tee's marked with worn spot in the ground, and a wooden stake and/or orange flags. Short tees are harder to find, marked with faint orange "]" spray painted on ground, usually worn grass is also telltale sign.

This is a totally different feel from the front 18. This area plays up and along a large hill, with scattered trees and bushes on the fairways, and fields of prairie grass for rough (hence the name), very different than the thick wooded canopy you are used to in the other 18.

Its more open than the regular course, but also longer. Like the wooded course, Prairieside is very well designed to force a variety of shots, and the wind is a factor on every hole.

Despite it's generally more open nature, trees are in play on every hole here, and many of the baskets on Prairieside are well-protected with multiple short trees, forcing a variety of spike hyzers and curves. Also present are several blind tee shots and hillside pins, even a forced mando around a giant dead tree. The hill that half the holes on this course shoot up or down brings more drastic elevation changes than anything present on the Woods course.

From the short tees, this course is like a longer UW-Whitewater, but with more drastic curves and better protected pins. From the longs, it is all that plus a great opportunity to flex your Max-D, which the woods course does not really allow, while still forcing control and some variety of shots. On this course, its about placing your drives, similar to holes 1-4 on the Woods course, but with shule on both sides of the fairway, vs an open field

On the whole, it is less technical than the Woods, and not as difficult overall. However, the holes are fun and fairly interesting in their own right, and offer a nice change of pace for those frustrated with shooting through all the narrow windows across the road.

If Prairieside were a separate course, I would give it 3 out of 5 discs. A good, fun, well-designed 9-hole course, but not as challenging or memorable as the original. However, if you're here, it's definitely worth your while to check out these new 9 for the different look and feel they provide.

12 of 12 people found this review helpful.

Some of the most enjoyable disc golf holes I have played

2-4    3/13/2011   4/9/2009
Review By: harr0140
Played: 556  Reviewed: 467  Exp: 4.4 Years
This review was updated on 1/7/2012
15 Helpful / 0 Not
Pros: 1) Great variety of holes. A handful of long open prairie grass holes. A handful or tight technical wooded holes. And some very interesting unique basket locations. Mostly left turning holes, but a few where you need to make a right hand turn. That might just be the basket location I played, so I would like to play this with the alternate basket locations!

2) A decent variety in length of hole. There were 4 holes under 200' but none of them are right out in front of you. they are technical holes. The old 18 is shorter than the new 9 holes, but they are equally enjoyable. The variety in length and shot required is great.

3) Nice baskets across the board and nice concrete tee pads on the old 18. New 9 will have concrete eventually I imagine, but for now are just dirt/grass. Multiple tees on most of the old 18 and half of the new holes. That is always a plus.

4) Nice signage on the old 18, and no signage on the new 9, but it is still being worked out I am sure. On the new 9 the forward tees are only recognizable by the painted ground so if you are looking for alt. tees on the new 9, you need to be aware (There are only 5 that I could see).

5) Very well maintained clean course. I played this after 2 weeks of being closed between the winter and spring seasons, but it is evident that the locals clean it up all the time, or perhaps the University staff does a good job keeping this clean. It does help that the course is surrounded completely by University property, all of which is pretty much a commuter campus. I wouldn't expect a lot of garbage, but even the trees, shrubs, grasses, and SHULE (My third usage in reviews, someone need to keep a tally!) is well maintained. No area on this course is unfair due to maintenance. Your shots are clearly dictated by the maintenance, but nothing stood out as unfair (except maybe #16 tee, those shrubs you shoot through or over should be 1' lower, I am only 5'7"!!!!! so I need to relaese the disc much higher than normal to get over them.)

6) Very unique course due to some features. #4Tournament basket is located on a 20' radius mound of soil which has boulder on the inner 6' radius. So if you overshoot the basket you are likely 10-12' away below the boulders and soil, shooting up to a basket about 6 feet in the air. Definitely not an easy putt in the wind!!!! Very unique basket location! Plus the next hole you go from elevated basket to elevated tee. This tee is set about 8 feet in the air on a platform. Not only is it elevated to change the feel of the shot but it is also blocked by trees. You have to either throw a huge anhyzer in to a 269' hole or a spike hyzer. It is a great hole that challenges your shot making! there are others worth mentioning, but I will let you all find out what makes this course so fun!

7) Beginner friendly, for the most part. Technical holes but fair enough for a beginner to enjoy.
Cons: 1) New 9 needs some signage, although I know that will be there soon.

2) The final 2 holes are kindof (No nevermind they are) lame for finishing holes. I would rather play them as 1 and 2 than 17 and 18. It leaves a bad taste in my mouth to finish on the most boring holes on the course!

3) I like a course I can only come up with 2 cons!
Other Thoughts: This course is two seperate courses. The older 18 holes are great wth a lot of variety. The new 9 seems to be a little bit like "Hey lets make another 9 holes" Nothing too exciting, but they do have more distance than the old 18. I also think it is still being developed so I can't be too harsh on them. Plus I would take a little bit lesser 9 on jsuta bout any other course just to have them in one location. These new 9 are a bit removed from the original 18, but thats ok its only 1 block away basically.

Nowhere on campus did I see that parking is restricted, but the guy who works in the property maintenance said you need to get a $1.50 or $2 daily parking pass from the police station. I parked for 2 hours on a weekend without a ticket and I think I was just outside the police department. There are also meters available if played during the week for a 2 hour limit but they only take quarters so come prepared. I wish this course was closer becuase it would be my highest ranked in Milwaukee to date, but Dretzka and Brown Deer have not opened yet for the spring/summer, so my guess is it would rank in the top 3 in the Milwaukee Metro Area. It looks like most people agree with this statement, depending on what you are looking for.

15 of 15 people found this review helpful.


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