Pros:
6 hole course located in Exeter Park, which is in Exeter, WI. If you don't know where that is, well, join the club. It's pretty much a blink-and-you'lll-miss-it town out in the middle of nowhere.
Nice DGA baskets, all mounted well enough and solid. They caught fine, and were numbered, which helped with navigation. One pin position per hole.
Concrete tees, in an hexagon shape. It took me a second glance to make sure they weren't some sort of satanic altar. They're fine, albeit a bit small. One tee per hole.
There's a decent amount of distance here, which was surprising. A few trees throughout the property, with some new ones planted that will offer a little more in the way of obstacles.
The river that runs along holes 3/4/5 could come into play, but you'd have to seriously overshoot 3/4, or flip one right the heck over on 5. It provides nice scenery, if nothing else.
As has been said before, you could set up some neat-ish safari holes here. Especially during the week, I'd imagine this park gets next to zero action, so you could probably incorporate the playground and other multi-use objects to at least make some things interesting.
Cons:
Navigation here is tough the first time through. No signs, no markings on the tees....just numbered baskets. Once you realize what's going on, it makes sense, but it takes a bit (and probably some extra throws) to figure it out.
It's about as flat as flat can be. There's the slightest downhill on hole 5, but you'll need some measuring tools to be sure.
While there's a few trees, there's not much. You're mostly throwing at open baskets here.
Other Thoughts:
It's mostly baskets in a field, which isn't always the worst thing in the world, I guess. Beginners and kids will dig it (especially with a playground and basketball court onsite), and there's at least some distance to air it out a bit.
Other than the safari opportunities, there's really not a lot of redeeming qualities here, especially when you consider how far out of the way it is from the rest of the civilized world.