Pros:
Bernódusarlundur is a park located in the village of Bolungarvik, which is in the remote Westfjords region of far northwestern Iceland. It's about as far northwest as you can get, in fact. There are nine holes of disc golf here.
The park is on a gentle slope, from the street side at the top down into an open valley. There are nice views of the surrounding mountains, and there are holes designed to play up and down the slope. There is also quite a bit of foliage to work around, with short pine trees and bushes all over the park.
The baskets are yellow banded DiscGolfPark models in great shape. The tee signs are wood posts with the hole number. Each hole theoretically has a longer White and shorter Red tee position (I did not find a couple of these signs, but presumably they are there somewhere).
There is a kiosk and large course map near the first tee. Take a picture of this map or use the copy uploaded here - you'll want it.
Cons:
This course does not appear to get any maintenance. Some of the holes were so overgrown that it was hard to even see what the intended line to the basket once was. I actually wondered if there ever was one on a couple of holes. #2 and #7 were the worst offenders I think, which I skipped. The grass was also very long on holes 4 and 5 so I decided to skip those holes too. You COULD play all of the above as over-the-top throws, if you knew where the baskets were and didn't mind searching for discs for a while.
The extra foliage makes the course a lot harder than it looks on paper. If this course were well maintained, an average recreational player would find lots of birdies on the sub-60 m (200') holes. All nine are shorter than that, even from the "longer" White tees.
Those tee pads are natural and also overgrown, making this a definite stand-and-throw situation.
There are a couple of longer awkward transitions, particularly between holes 2 and 3. Even with the arrows welded on the bottom of the baskets, you'll need that photo of the map to navigate.
The park has no other amenities - no trash cans, benches, or restroom that I saw. No practice basket either, although the whole round felt like practice at best.
Other Thoughts:
The course, and indeed the entire park, are easy to miss. The park looks similar to the surrounding land other than a higher density of foliage. The small sign for the park is parallel to the road if I'm recalling correctly, and the closest baskets are hidden behind some pine trees. Trust the GPS pin, and just park on the side of the road as there is no parking lot.
=== Disclaimer and Award ===
I'm an American from the state of Michigan who played 14 courses in Iceland while on vacation. My ratings and thoughts are therefore relative to the other courses I played in Iceland - but also the hundreds of US courses I have played. Furthermore, I use the entire 0-5 rating scale per DGCR standards. For example, a 3.5/5 may be seen as a negative on Amazon or UDisc - but here it really does mean "Very Good".
I am giving each course I played in Iceland an informal award, because every course has something special to offer.
This course's award is: Most Untapped Potential in the Westfjords.
I'm kind of grasping at straws here. In the state I experienced it in, this course is barely playable. But there is enough foliage, rolling elevation, space, and views available at this park to potentially host a nice 9-hole course - no asterisks about it.
As is, if you're trying to get a round in somewhere near here I'd recommend Raggagarður.
If you do make it this far, and you have good ground clearance and weather I'd recommend continuing up Rt. 630 all the way to the end where there is a place called Minnibakki Beach (about 12 km past here, up and over a mountain pass on a rough gravel road. We made it in a Ford Puma on a dry fall day). The beach sits in a little cove with tall mountains on both sides, and there is a creek running out into the bay. A couple of small buildings do little to spoil the otherwise untouched landscape. We were there for maybe 45 minutes and saw no one. Depending on what oceanographer you ask, the body of water MIGHT be considered the Arctic Ocean. Out there across the water maybe 400 km (250 miles) away is Greenland. This place felt like the end of the entire earth and was the definite highlight of our morning in the Bolungarvik area.