Pros:
-- Tee signs for all the holes, including a map, distance and a direction to the next tee. However, they only show one of the pin placements, so beware.
-- Course map next to parking lot, although it is old and only shows one tee pad per hole and one basket position.
-- Permanent signs pointing you toward the next tee in a few places where that next tee is not immediately obvious.
-- Cement tee pads. Most holes have two, and a few appear to have a third (PVC pipe in the ground but nothing marked).
-- The course makes good use of the elevation, although there are a lot more uphill throws than downhill throws. The elevation is not extreme, but it works well for disc golf.
-- Practice basket, although it has seen better days.
-- This is one of the best courses in DFW after a rain. We once played two days after a major storm, and there was only mud in one spot on the actual course. There was a LOT of water in other parts of the park, but the course itself was basically dry because of the sandy soil near the creek.
-- Restrooms (near the playground by 14 basket and 15 tee). There are also picnic tables (some of them covered).
Cons:
-- VERY long walk from No.18 back to the parking lot and No. 1.
-- Three double mandos, which are almost always gimmicks. The one on No. 18 serves some safety purposes to protect cars in the road and players on No. 17, but the other two do not.
-- Minimal shade, not a good thing in Texas in the summer.
-- No water that I saw.
-- There are some safety concerns. No. 6 basket (at least one of the positions) is in the edge of the No. 7 fairway. No. 13 tee pad (short) is about 20 feet behind the 12 long basket, but the tee is protected by trees/vines/bushes. Anyone on the 14 tee pad could get hit by a drive from 13. On 15 you throw uphill to a blind basket. Pulling a shot right could endanger anyone at the 18 tee or people at picnic tables. You can't see any of that from the 15 tee, so you don't know to shout a warning.
Other Thoughts:
-- The course starts play around the edge of a ballfield and open area with the first several holes either throwing into or out of the woods. The finishing holes are more lightly wooded throughout.
-- There isn't a lot "wrong" with this course, but there isn't a lot "right" either. The holes are fairly pedestrian. There is some variation in length (two just under 200 feet and two longer than 300 using the distances for the original tee pads and original pin placements), but even that doesn't add much. The course is worth playing if you're in the area, but it's not worth a long drive.
-- The added concrete tee pads give some variety. On the more open holes, this tends to just add 50-75 feet of distance. On the holes that have more trees, the new tee pads tend to create a different line to the basket without adding much distance much. In a few cases, the new tee pad shortens a hole.
-- The creek that gives the park its name is visible on many holes but not in play much. On a couple of holes, you could reach the water 20-30 feet past the basket, and on a couple you COULD reach the water with a sawed-off RHBH hyzer, but there is no water carry.