Ellisville, MO

Bluebird Park

Permanent course
2.545(based on 28 reviews)
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0 7
heger_246
Experience: 2 played 1 reviews
1.50 star(s)

Great Hike 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:May 16, 2009 Played the course:once

Pros:

If you like to hike, this is your course. You may find a disc to take home.

Cons:

The course follows a narrow path through the woods.Very possible for one to twist an ankle during a throw. You may lose a disc for someone else to take home. People do not respect the land. There are beer cans/bottles everywhere. No variety of shots. You are either in the woods or in a wide open field for 3 holes.

Other Thoughts:

If you want to play and are thinking about Bluebird, just play at Paul A. Schroeder. It is a MUCH better course and only four miles away.
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2 4
drewbiggs
Experience: 4 played 4 reviews
2.50 star(s)

Not bad, but there are better nearby 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:Jun 22, 2007 Played the course:5+ times

Pros:

Very technical( you are playing in a forest most of the time). Beautiful park.

Cons:

A deer tried to murder my dog, I usually get a tick or two when playing this course. Some of the holes are just plain ridiculous.

Other Thoughts:

If you live nearby and have 45 minutes, why not?
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6 0
peabody
Bronze level trusted reviewer
Experience: 21.1 years 55 played 34 reviews
2.00 star(s)

Diamond in the Rough 2+ years

Reviewed: Played on:Jun 15, 2007 Played the course:once

Pros:

Some challenging shots on some very steep hills. Hole one is a dogleg left around a steep hill. Don't miss right and you better have a flat landing or you are at the bottom of the hill. The deer are all over and they will watch you miss putts and secretly laugh at your lame attempts. Very tough tight shots combined with a couple of wide open shots. This could be a fantastic 18 hole course with the right work. Scenery is just fantastic.

Cons:

No tee boxes. No signs. No cards with maps. You just have to search out the next hole. Some are easy to find, some are darn near impossible like #8. Some moderate hiking skills are required but there isn't a lot of up and down traversing.

Other Thoughts:

Great park but lots of runners and walkers using the trails. Lukas Liquors is just down the road 5 minutes away and they have the best selection of beer and wine in the St. Louis area.
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1 7
FENTONflyer
Experience: 16.9 years 9 played 6 reviews
1.00 star(s)

terrible 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:Dec 22, 2008 Played the course:once

Pros:

This course had a lot of elevation changes so much so it was detrimental to play. The course had very good signs to notify where the course began.

Cons:

The park's mountainous nature made it very poor for a quality disc golf course. Some of the holes were nicely marked and others were extremely difficult to find. Finding where the baskets were located was extremely difficult at times. The course does not swing itself around very well to its beginning.

Other Thoughts:

Overall, a very frustrating outing. The course made me want to quit that day for the first time yet. Granted some of the poor taste in my mouth in reference to bluebird could have been the wind and temperature conditions, but i still thought it was a terrible course.
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5 3
REDARMY
Silver level trusted reviewer
Experience: 15.9 years 53 played 35 reviews
2.00 star(s)

Much room for improvement 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:Nov 27, 2008 Played the course:once

Pros:

Cool layout. The fact that most of the pins are set on slopes and nearly all of the pins aren't visible from the tee makes shot selection/control very important. This is definately NOT a huck-it-and-hope-for-a-good-lie course.

Good signs to point you towards the next tee.

The series of signs that points DG'ers from the park entrance to the parking area right by the first tee is the best i've seen in the StL area, but they could use one or two more.

Cons:

Tee signs to show you where the pin is are crap.

Hole 3's basket broken.

Newbies will get confused finding their way from 4 to 5, then finding the pin for 5.

No established par markings on the tee signs.

Tee pad markers consist of painted 5-lb concrete blocks that aren't anchored to anything and as such can be moved at a whim. That makes the already fairly useless tee signs (and yardage measurements) even more worthless.

Other Thoughts:

Even though it is only a 9-hole course, this park has great potential if someone with course design knowledge and/or someone with a few $1000 burning a hole in their pockets would jump in.

The deer that live in the park are either fearless or very hungry. Never got so close to a deer until i made my trip to Bluebird. (Walking from the pin for 8 to the tee for 9)
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7 0
Brokensaint
Bronze level trusted reviewer
Experience: 16.5 years 339 played 31 reviews
3.00 star(s)

Southside 3 2+ years

Reviewed: Played on:Nov 13, 2008 Played the course:once

Pros:

Wooded course set on pretty serious slopes. Very little (no) forgiveness for errant throws or rolls. A couple of open throws, but all but one has the sloping ground to consider.

Cons:

It's only 9 holes

Other Thoughts:

I had a lot of fun on this course, and although Saint Louis has more than a couple beautiful 18 hole courses to play, if you are on the south end of town, play Bluebird, Paul Schroeder and Watson trails. They're all 9 holes and about 10 minutes or so from one another and deserve to be played.
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6 6
Chucktown
Experience: 17 years 18 played 12 reviews
3.00 star(s)

I hated it. 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Updated: Played on:Jun 26, 2007 Played the course:once

Pros:

Nice park, course starts out with 3 challenging holes that threaten you at each throw with a result of your disc rolling down the hill. First few holes are wooded and the last are mostly open. Good range of distances.

Cons:

Like I said the first three holes will definitely result in somebody walking down a steep hill. Not very challenging after the first few hole, mostly open areas for the final holes.

Other Thoughts:

Not a bad 9 hole course, but definitely very challenging for any beginner. Has some nice variety but unfortunately only 9 holes.
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15 1
Three Putt
Staff member
Diamond level trusted reviewer
Premium Member
Experience: 29.3 years 152 played 127 reviews
3.00 star(s)

9 hole that's worth the trip 2+ years

Reviewed: Updated: Played on:Oct 17, 2007 Played the course:5+ times

Pros:

I'm not usually impressed with 9-hole courses, but this is a definite exception. With challenging elevation and five heavily wooded shots, this course gets your attention in a hurry.

Holes 1-4 are in the woods, with the baskets on # 2 & # 3 set just right to send your upshot rolling 30 ft downhill. The ground is compacted with no woodchips, so what might look like a nice shot will skip and land far away from your intended target. Hole # 3 is the ace run, but the pin is protected so it's not a gimmie. Holes 5-8 are in the open, but hole # 6 is a decent hole and the pin for # 7 is set on a slope and can lead to a rollaway. # 9 is a short, uphill wooded shot. The backhand route has crown closed but there is still an overstable flick shot route to the hole.

It is a very nicely put together course. It has a good balance of a decent intermediate challenge level and fun elements to make it an enjoyable round.

Cons:

2019 Update: The course was designed with multiple natural tees, and the tee signs are still the original signs showing two tee lengths. The course now has one concrete tee per hole, so there are no multiple distances (the course has always had one pin placement.) The distances on the sign are to old tees that in some cases were not used, so how long the shots are is anybody's guess. New tee signs would be a nice upgrade for this course.

The tee sign for hole 3 is at least 50' behind the actual tee. If you do what I did, you will be walking down the path and see the tee sign with no tee, wonder what to do, throw a shot from that general area and then as you walk toward your throw notice the concrete tee set up the hill waaayyy in front of the tee sign.

The open shots have partially mowed fairways. The mowed area for 6 is pretty wide, but the other mowed areas are pretty tight and should be widened.

The baskets are old single chain 1st generation DisCatchers, so they don't catch very well. They have added a second ring to every other link to kinda-sorts make them act like double chains, but it doesn't work. The basket attachments are the old shallow attachments are well.

When you finish hole # 6, you have to walk back up the fairway to get to the tee for hole 7. That transition is not intuitive and is not marked, so people could get lost at that transition. When you finish hole # 9 the path is there that takes you back toward the parking lot, but if you don't get off the path and walk down the park road that path won't get you back to your car. If you are not paying attention you could take an unintended hike. At least it's a nice hike.

Full Disclosure: I played this course before it was officially open and had a tiny bit of input into the design. The rugged up and down of the opening holes was a feature and the draw of the course; you went to Bluebird for it. Nothing about the "rugged" part of this course took me by surprise by the time DGCR became a thing, so I've had a review on here for years that says nothing about the rugged terrain of holes 1-4. It's rugged, folks. It's like that on the very first hole. Be prepared. If you are not ready for a hike, by the time this course mellows out at hole 5 you will already be hating life and this disc golf course.

Other Thoughts:

After traveling to a lot of parks where you have to wander around forever just to find the course, it was nice to see a course so nicely marked. The main sign points the direction you need to turn to get to the course, and two signs reassure you as you drive back to it that you are still going the right way. Holes 1-3 and 9 are on one hillside and 4-8 are on another, and there are two signs pointing the way to hole # 4 and a big sign in front of the tee for # 9. You rarely see this much signage on a disc golf course.

Since I originally wrote this review, The St. Louis courses haven't really kept up with the times. There really isn't an outstanding "must play" course, but there are several above-average courses and a lot of good golf to be played. Bluebird IMO fits in along in that top 1/2 of courses in town. It's not a "must play" by any stretch of the imagination, and the old baskets will probably turn a lot of golfers off. To me it has the right mix of challenge and fun shots to make it worth the trip.
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