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New Orleans, LA

City Park - Old Layout

3.135(based on 4 reviews)
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City Park - Old Layout reviews

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2 2
Longjonsilverz
Experience: 18.1 years 54 played 21 reviews
4.50 star(s)

Great course in a Great park 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:Dec 30, 2014 Played the course:once

Pros:

Good hole design, making good use of the live oak trees and ponds all around the area. Two sets of tees keeps it challenging for all skill levels. The pictures on the signs are useful for a first time player. Good if you like natural tees. Awesome location being in the city park with all of the other things you can enjoy while you're there.

Cons:

Too many holes with water hazards. This is a nightmare on a windy day, For those who like concrete tee pads, there are some natural tees on this course. A few spots have a risk of walkers and other people being in the way. It can get a little muddy when its wet. Perhaps a little too open for some.

Other Thoughts:

This is a really fun course. If you're in the New Orleans area, be sure to stop by and play this one. Some of the large trees make for some fun obstacles, but otherwise its mostly an open course that you can really bring out your long drives on. Water hazards are fun and make the course interesting, but sometimes I don't want to worry about losing another disc, especially if its windy.
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8 1
machfive916
Experience: 10.2 years 9 played 5 reviews
3.00 star(s)

machfive916's City park DGC review 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:Dec 23, 2014 Played the course:5+ times

Pros:

In my own warped world, 2014, like 2013 was the year of the "bad back". Having a bad back definitely limits participation in many sports, so recognizing my limitations and in an effort to change my sedentary lifestyle, I bought a starter set of discs in April 2014 and went to the City Park Disc Golf Course.

My first few visits here were "just ok", as I could not throw the discs as far as I had hoped. I also threw a few in the water, which is no fun either. The grass on the course was high and this made locating your discs somewhat of a pain if you didn't watch exactly where it landed. But I felt good about being outside and at least I was getting a little exercise as I walked the course. It's easy to gain proficiency rather quickly in this sport and I watched my score go from the 80's down to the low 60's in just 2-3 months of casual play.

In the summer of 2014, the course started receiving more attention and the grass was getting cut more frequently and they installed several brand new baskets. They also started repositioning many of the baskets and eventually reversed the entire order of the course. If you haven't played in the last few months, the course layout will brand new to you, and the new layout presents more challenges.

Some of the trickier holes (baskets) can be:

Hole 1 - This short hole forces you to throw parallel with the water to your right and makes you go around a tree next to the shoreline. Therefore, you have to throw it out far enough to get around the tree, but high enough to make sure it gets back to the shoreline.

Hole 2 - The tee box to this hole forces you to throw across the lagoon, but unless you hit the tree on the other side, there is little chance of losing a disc.

Hole 3 - Unless you play it safe by going along the shoreline, this hole will force you to throw over the water into a basket on a peninsula. And yes, I have lost a few discs here.

Hole 4 - Here is another hole where you can play it safe by throwing parallel to the shore as there is over 225 feet of water on your left to cross to the basket.

Hole 6 - Although short, you have to throw straight or your disc will bounce between trees like a pinball.

Hole 8 - Grip it and rip it as this hole is even longer than it appears.

Hole 11 - Overshoot this basket on top of a hill and your disc will disappear in the brush.

Hole 13 - This will test your skill at making your disc perform a right hook in order to reach the basket. Hook it too much and you are in thick brush.

Hole 18 - If you want to make a par, you better be able to throw at least 225 feet straight over the water.

The course has steadily improved this year, as has participation among local residents. It can be played and enjoyed by people of all ages and athletic ability and I would recommend this course to anyone. It's a fun sport that requires very little start up costs and no greens fees such as the real game of golf

If you do happen to play, use a sharpie marker and write your name and phone # on all of your discs. I have had at least 5 discs returned to me by "Joe", who regularly fishes them out of the lagoon.

Hope to see y'all out there.
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2 4
MikeK
Gold level trusted reviewer
Experience: 29 years 330 played 128 reviews
2.50 star(s)

Man up and play the pro tees quickly 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Updated: Played on:Nov 5, 2014 Played the course:5+ times

Pros:

---two sets of tees; highly recommend playing the long (yellow) tees, where even par is a good score
---multiple pin placements on ten of the holes
---lots of water for scenery and challenge
---several huge oak trees to throw around, some 200+ years old
---elevated green on #11
---under 4 miles from Bourbon Street

Cons:

---the short tees are too easy for advanced players, but with water on the first four holes, it's too hard for first-time players
---tees can get muddy after a rain

Other Thoughts:

How "quickly" one can get jaded and not appreciate the beauty and challenge of the disc golf course at City Park. Sure, it's no 5-star destination course but it's definitely above average, with good baskets and a lively local scene. The course is maintained by NO Team, otherwise known as New Orleans Disc Golf Club, who donated all the baskets and tees and labor to get the course installed at City Park. It's a true team effort out there with a lot of volunteer spirit.
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10 1
Qikly
Diamond level trusted reviewer
Experience: 11.9 years 181 played 150 reviews
2.50 star(s)

A Local's Take on the New CP Layout 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:Nov 4, 2014 Played the course:5+ times

Pros:

Perhaps City Park's most definitive challenge is its water hazards. These factor into numerous holes in a variety of ways, be it bordering fairways (1 short, 18), forcing some intense water carry (1 long, 3, 4), providing a further mid-fairway consideration (2), or 3's distinctive peninsula green. Intermittent trees further complicate these hazards, either forcing low shots from off the tee or directing your line onto unsafe paths. The often-windy conditions make these hazards even harder to avoid, and transform that huge hyzer shot you want to throw into a sail that may be carried into the stygian abyss. Be sure to bring a few discs you wouldn't mind losing, although the local club does a good job of regularly fishing out lost discs and calling the numbers thereon.

Sprawling oaks throughout the course shield pins, force shots low to the ground, make for a few tight windows, and require some huge arcing throws. There are a few tight lanes (5, 6, 15), some rough-guarded fairways (12-14), and occasional sidewalk OB (9, 10). Although the tree cover is too open to regularly provide challenging approaches, thoughtful tee and pin placement make for numerous challenging and varied shots from off the tee. You'll tee off with everything from putters to distance drivers irregardless of your arm, especially if playing from the long tees, which provide some nice distance and some challenging par 3s.

Speaking of which: the two sets of tees encompass a wide range of skill levels and often provide satisfyingly different looks at the basket. Big arms will get the opportunity to stretch out and shape lines on extended scales. A few forced water carries on the long tees will separate the contenders from the pretenders. Short tees aren't babied, and offer their own hair-raising moments and engaging shots.

Many of the holes have multiple pin placements that are regularly moved, a welcome increase in variety from the old layout.

Course is well-groomed. Parking is easy to find and ample.

Cons:

City Park's biggest drawback is simply how open it is: there are too few obstacles to challenge approaches. There are many opportunities for errant drives, but recovery shots are often easy enough to save par without much difficulty. Because of the openness you can also play conservatively on many holes and preserve a decent score: many obstacles and potential hazards only really threaten if you push for birdie. This exclusively par 3 set up makes for a lot of deuce-or-die holes, especially from the short tees. The long tees also suffer from this problem, though not as much.

Although shot variety is good, some other characteristics are too self-similar. The level of woodedness doesn't exceed a moderate threshold, and there's a complete lack of par 4s and 5s. This is simply a function of the land's limitations - park officials have a tight hold on what the designers have available to work with - so course design isn't to blame, but it's still a bummer that caps what City Park has to offer.

Navigation is not first-timer friendly. There are a lot of times where you have to walk past the closest tee to get to the next hole, especially on the back 9. Fairways never cross, but there are several points where they come uncomfortably close, requiring players to keep an eye out for each other lest an errant drive occur. Next tee indications are needed at some points.

Conflicts with park goers are not uncommon. It can be frustrating given how large and sprawling the park is that that sweet old couple or obnoxiously PDA love birds will camp off hole 16, but it happens. Yearly events such as races and concerts can turn part of the course into a parking lot or throw up temporary fencing that conflicts with a few holes. It's not an issue on a weekly basis but it does occur.

The course doesn't drain well, a problem amplified by the natural tees. These tees are fine in dry conditions but really hinder play in the days after a rain.

Other Thoughts:

As a local, I'm psyched about a new layout that breaks the old course's routine and provides better-integrated long tees and multiple pin positions. But I recognize that this course has its limitations, mostly due to the relatively open environment. There's enough technicality here to engage - the course has a bunch of smartly designed, risk/reward birdie runs - but not enough to provide a high level experience. As stated, that's not the designers' fault, it's just the function of having a course in a major city's park in the flat Gulf south.

If you're visiting the city, this is by far the most convenient course to visit, and the only area course accessible by public transportation. The Pines in Mandeville is probably my favorite, but it's a 45 minute drive from the city.

Feel free to shoot me a PM if you'd like a course guide.
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