Pros:
This course is set in a fairly remote and scenic area on a beautiful YMCA camp property. The cleanliness of the camp and course was impeccable and the fairways are obvious and well tended. Tee signage is creative, colorful, and very representative of hole lay out. Directional signage is present and obvious when needed and course flow is generally good. The course doubling back in on itself at the mid-point makes a quick 9 an easy option.
Hole design is quite nice with varied fairway sizes, lots of tucked-away and hidden baskets, plenty of left and right shots, a very nice mix of wooded, partially wooded, and wide open holes, and plenty of variations in distance. Ending up in the rough here is very rarely a total disaster.
The complexity of most of the holes on the back 9 is exceptional! The wide open, slightly uphill #13 seems to go on forever and winds can make this hole a bear! The open, gently curving, slightly downhill blind right to #14 compliments #13 nicely. The sharp right on #15 gives the player a couple of options requiring serious consideration of risk/reward trade-offs; choose the up and over route and risk getting blown off-course due to wind aloft, or play an easy anny/flick to lay-up for deuce or par. The hill climb to the elevated (and currently unmarked) #17 tee is well worn-in but not well marked. Once on the cement tee pad, you'll have multiple options on a good route to the pin. Again, the risk/reward quotient is high on this one! Pick the narrow "thru" channel, or go up and over to lay up mid-fairway. The incredibly frustrating, long #18 with multiple changes of direction, 3 bottle necks, and gobs of overhanging trees and brush, may be best managed by the average player at the marked par (5) using lay-up putter shots rather than shooting for 3 using fancy directional changes with drivers.
Cons:
Holes #3-5 got a little monotonous as all are straight with tree-lined fairways and very similar distances. Laying-up on #17 leaves you right behind the basket for #16, making injury to other players a very real possibility.
As with most natural tee boxes in this area, loose sand makes footing treacherous on several holes.
Other Thoughts:
Park in front of and check in/pay at the office then cross the street and follow the signs to the first tee.
Everyone we encountered on the course was incredibly friendly. The cleanliness of the area, course layout, hole variety, changes in distances, and course signage makes this course a real standout from other mostly flat courses.
As an aside, the address of the camp didn't register as valid on my Magellan.....just FYI.