Pros:
This nine hole course was squeezed into unused areas of the small neighborhood park, and offers some challenging holes. This is a relatively short course with 4 holes in the 200' range and 2 more around 260'. Longest holes are 395' and 412'.
Terrain is short mowed grass or dirt with widely spaced Mesquite trees.
Good concrete tee pads, basic signs, and Discatcher baskets are all there and in good shape. Adequate parking with a bench here and there as well.
Most holes require shaping of your drive, with a couple really favoring a late fade to the right. So LHBH or RHFH are helpful here.
I found Hole 7 to be the most challenging hole on the course as it offers two different gaps to drive through, but both are low-headroom due to overhanging trees.
Hole 8 places the basket up on a small mound to add the only elevation to the course.
Cons:
The course is dead flat, the holes are fairly short, and there is really nothing here to get excited about. It is a basic neighborhood 9-hole course that is fine for local play, but not worth going out of your way to experience. Most holes have a tree or two to beat, but nothing else.
The first time I played was on a weekend morning. With the walking path and playground in use I really had to be aware of other park users and potential conflict. It impacted my shot selection on a couple of holes. My second round was a weekday morning with an empty park, and I was much more comfortable "going for it".
Several holes play along the fenceline of neighboring homes, and losing a disc over a fence is a real possibility.
While many holes on the course are short, the Par 2 labels on many of the tee signs are strange. Is a 298' hole with an OB fence on the left and a tree to work around on the right really a Par 2? No.
Other Thoughts:
If this was my local course I'd happily play it with putters and midranges and go elsewhere (Green Jay) to work on drives.