Agree totally about the disorganization. Luckily I was in the MA1-A Pool and didn't have much scheduling issues, but nearly everyone else did. Hopefully someone else runs the event next year (Straight Line Discs, probably), because it could be great. I compare it to AM Worlds in Emporia last year, which DD ran and it was easily the best tournament I've ever played in.
As for the courses, they were obviously affected by the weather. Huge storm Thursday night before practice day, which caused a lot of trees to come down and left a lot of standing water around the courses. Lots of volunteers and course staff did a great job clearing a lot of the down trees, but they just couldn't get everything. I'm sure these courses are immaculate 90% of the time, we just got unlucky. The all-day rain on Sunday hurt, too.
The courses at Selah were awesome, I preferred Creekside over the Lake course. Lots of beautiful landscapes, some really risky shots, and a bunch of really tough Par 4s and 5s. The Lakeside course had all of that as well, but also had a middle bunch of holes that were really wooded that I didn't like as much. Still mostly great holes but just weren't as much fun.
The Trey Deuce course was by far the easiest one, and it helped that we played Best Shot there. Lots of 2-able holes and most of the Par 4s were not too difficult. Other than 18, there weren't very many overly wooded shots. A few that played through a tree farm were cool.
I thought Texas Twist was definitely the hardest course, and it sucked playing Alternate Shot over there. The first handful of holes are actually pretty easy, with several opportunities for birdies (other than hole #3, which I think needs another line built in). But the majority of the course is really tight in the woods, with really hard lines to hit and really unforgiving woods. The course is still very very new, and I think needs some more trees cleared on most of the wooded holes. I wouldn't want to make the course 'easy', per se, but on like 10 holes in a row you are really just playing poke-n-hope with the trees. Obviously more accurate players will do better, but some of the lines are just too tight and too much is left up to luck. Also the course was hurt by the majority of it being fairly low lying and near a bunch of creeks, which made everything really swampy after the Thursday storm. I'm told the course was unplayable on Sunday.
All in all, the courses were fantastic. Any flaws I could point out are just nitpicking against what really are the best courses I've ever played.
I think I'd be less inclined to play more tournaments there, and not because of the poor organization. I think I would enjoy them more by going down with a few friends, staying on the property, playing some golf, have a couple of beers, and just relax. The properties and the courses are beautiful and great for tournament play, but I'd personally enjoy them more playing casually. In the midst of all the competition (though it was light-hearted, mostly), it was harder for me to enjoy the courses. I envy people who live closer by and can play there multiple times a year.