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Columbia, PA

Fairview Park DGC

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3.255(based on 4 reviews)
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Fairview Park DGC reviews

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11 0
jamespenn
Silver level trusted reviewer
Experience: 4.2 years 36 played 37 reviews
2.50 star(s)

Fair pretty much sums it up. The views are Ok too.

Reviewed: Played on:Feb 21, 2024 Played the course:2-4 times

Pros:

Wide variety of playing corridors, some are open fields, some are brutally narrow.

Compact layout with centralized parking means you're never that far from your car if there's an emergency.

Even though the holes are pretty close together, you aren't in any imminent danger

Some pretty holes in the wooded hillside

The very simple directional arrows on the ground are a big help

They made an effort to equalize forehand/backhand, uphill/downhill, wide/narrow. It's not tunnel shots all day favoring the right handed backhand player.

You almost certainly won't lose a disc, but there are places where you might not be allowed to go get it.....you'll see below.

Cons:

One tee and basket per hole. They could maybe have another tee. The park is too small to have more baskets

the tees are turf and while some of them are level, others follow the lay of the land. Why not make them all level?

Parking is sure to be tight if there's a tournament.

There is a shooting range adjacent to the course that promises to prosecute you if you set foot onto their land. It probably was a bad idea to have two wooded holes run down a narrow strip of land right on the border. This is probably the only place you might lose a disc, if you bonk one into the range and don't dare go get it.

After playing a very fun #4 which requires a little turnover shot down a steep hill, the next hole goes straight back up that hill, is just as long, and borders a public street with a mando tree that forces you to play close to or out and over the street. The tee needs to moved to where the mando is as it is way too easy to end up in the street.

#6 goes back down the same hill parallel to #4 and you need pretty much the same shot.....but this time you're in the dense woods and it's the start of Plinko Land and threats of jail time

Other Thoughts:

Udisc gives this course one black diamond with the warning Long-Technical. And so it is. It's a nice, small, pretty park and the course does it's best to stay in the woods as long as it can because it knows the open field holes are dull.

Holes 1-3 are in the open field next to the hockey rink with very little danger beyond their excessive length. Per the sign on #2 it appears maybe the intent was to have a couple of hazards surround the basket, but I've never seen those and per the other reviews on here, they've never been there. #3 adds some OB to define a fairway but it's miles wide and unless you are aimed totally in the wrong direction, you'll be fine.

The course perks up a bit with a very cool #4, a little downhill shot requiring a left to right shape to get close. And there's OB long. This is the first time your brain will activate, in a pleasurable way.

Unfortunately the course gives away all good will generated on #4 on the next hole which may be the worst in Lancaster County. A ridiculous, steeply uphill and excessively long par 3 that forces you to go around a pine tree by hyzering something out over a public street. Unsafe. Move the tee up to near the mando tree and make it 170 feet. It's still uphill from there and still challenging, but you aren't taking direct aim at cars coming around a blind curve.

#6-16 are entirely in the woods and are a succession of jagged dogleg par 3s through tiny gaps. Fun? At times, it's always satisfying to smash that gap, but on almost all of them, your best play is to simply get through the tiny gap with something that goes about 200 feet and then hope for a throw-in birdie. The doglegs are in both directions so neither hand is favored. #7 is straight and flush against the border of the shooting range....if that Road Runner doesn't turn over....

The woods holes are definitely pleasant, but the problem is where are the birdies? The doglegs turn the holes into some unnatural pretzels. Your day becomes about avoiding bogeys, not making birdies. If you like that mental challenge, and I sometimes do, here's your place. It's not impossible to get to C2 on a few of the woods holes, but there has to be a lot of luck to miss everything.

#17 emerges from the woods to a nice downhill shot in the open field.....then you realize it's a 400-foot par 3, the last 150 of which is a dogleg right back into the woods. I don't have that shot. It'd be a fun par 4 though.

#18 seems like a good idea, a Maple Hill type par-4 hole where you fire away down a wooded corridor hoping to emerge into the glorious open field beyond so you have a clear second shot. However, that tunnel mouth is much farther than it looks, and the gap is effectively much smaller than it looks because it's not quite a straight line. Yet another hole where pitching something forward 150-200 feet just to stay in the fairway and then playing for par is a pretty good idea.

The course is very new, but in good shape, and there's been one tournament there, the 2023 Red Rose Roundup. A review of the scoreboard confirmed what I thought, it's a bogey factory. The best pro score for two rounds was -6. Only one other person finished under par, in any division. +3 won MA1. +7 was the MA2 winner. +14 won MA3. +18 won MA50. An even par round was rated 960. On Udisc, +4 is a 200 rated round. That was 922 PDGA rated.

The course probably would be more fun if you jacked up the pars a bit. Right now it's a par 56 with maybe 2 realistic chances at birdie for the average amateur. The course is too tough for what it is, a nice little public park course. Most of the play here is going to be by casual locals, and if they are immediately overwhelmed by grueling length and poke and pray frustration every hole, they won't be enticed to keep going. Truly great municipal park courses aimed at getting people to start disc golf and keep playing it, are an equal mix holes you might birdie and holes you might bogey. That's why South Hills in Lebanon or Buchmiller and Ship Rock in Lancaster are so popular. Both give you stretches where you can make some birdies, then there are holes that yank those birdies right back. For example if you play South Hills yellow, 1, 3, 5, and 7 are definite bogey opportunities, but 2, 4, 6, 8 and 9 are relatively friendly. There's a constant shift between whoa this is tough and hey I might birdie this. Some people don't like Lakeside in Myerstown, but this too gives you a lot of places to make birdie, and a lot of places to crash and burn.

Fairview is very similar in appearance to Lenni Lenape in Lebanon but Lenni is a much better course because even though there are a lot of trees and weird lines in the woods, and brutal length on the open holes, Lenni still has that constant roller coaster give and take. Making 6 birdies, 4 bogeys, and a triple in one round at Lenni is not unheard of. Fairview just relentlessly puts bogeys on your card and never takes them off. Whoever can avoid the punishment the longest is who wins.

Based on the scores in the 2023 tournament, there needs to be more holes it's possible to birdie. Eagle McMahon is never coming here, so make it realistic for the average local player.

I would make both of the par 4s on this course into a par 5. #18 clearly plays like one already, and hardly anyone birdied #3 and there were a lot of bogeys. Make the OB narrower on #3 and it would be a legit par 5 for all but the pros. I'd also convert 10 and 17 into a par 4. 10 already plays like a par 4, it's 330 feet with no natural path to the hole. You could try to play a backhand flex but getting within 75 feet of the basket takes real doing. Nobody birdied it in the 2023 tournament. Sure, it'd be kind of a soft par 4, but clearly it's near impossible to get a 2. There were also no birdies at all on #17, so this is another candidate to turn a less than stellar par 3 into a fun short par 4. There's room to move the basket back 50 feet.

Now you would have a par-60 course with at least 5 holes the average person would at least have hope of making birdie. If you birdie 4 of those, and hold on the rest of the time. Even par! This isn't a course trying to land an A-tier, it's your typical public park course and it doesn't need to be a bogey barrage for 18 straight holes.
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18 0
HyooMac
Diamond level trusted reviewer
Experience: 6.9 years 421 played 389 reviews
3.50 star(s)

New in ‘22!

Reviewed: Played on:Aug 12, 2022 Played the course:once

Pros:

+ A very good brand new course that will improve as the wooded holes get beaten in. The throwing lines are well defined, but the fairways (like any other newly-cleared space in the woods) still have some stumps, roots and rocks that cause unpredictable groundplay (and a little bit of tripping)


+ Although the course isn't particularly long, the gaps are very tight - so it doesn't play like an under-6000' course. Very good mix of backhand and forehand lines


+ The first five and the last two holes are open, and not particularly memorable. Everything in between is deep woods with tight gaps off tees, elevation changes, narrow fairways. The woods dominate the layout, and it's easy to forget the field holes


+ #6 and #7 both set up for RHFH: #6 is a right dogleg, and while #7 is straight, it dares you to hang something out over the OB line along the right side for the best angle to the basket


+ Hole #10 is a 330' that rewards a perfectly-executed RH turnover that bends around trees bumping out into the narrow fairway from the left side about 175' off the tee


+ Hole #12 is a slightly uphill, 247' par 3. You've got a throwing lane you can see the whole way but it gets narrowed by trees at various points along the way. Just a beautiful hole in the woods


+ Hole #18 is a 600' par 4 with a long alley uphill and out of the woods from the tee. Even if you clear the woods, you'll still have as much as 400' left to get to the basket



Cons:

- The tees are new, but I'm not sure how well they'll age. They're turf nailed to frames, and some of them don't seem to have a thick base underneath them, so I'm wondering if they'll get rutted and uneven after some rains and snowmelt. For now they're fine (although a few of them are titled uphill)


Other Thoughts:

~ Turf tees, DisCatcher baskets, excellent signage with map and clear explanations of OB (there's lots of it) and drop zones. Maps show alternate lines, and signs list the elevation change. Basket-to-tee, there are big navigation arrows pointing the way (some of them also include the number of the hole being pointed to - it would be helpful to have numbers added to all of them)


~ Some tweaks to make the open holes more interesting: the sign on hole #2 indicates "hazard bunkers" around the green, although there's nothing there yet - maybe a future improvement? Hole #3 is a 653' par 4 dogleg that plays in the open, but the designers have run OB stakes to define the fairway


~ It's easy to start on the third hole, with the tee next to the lower parking lot. The only real difference is that it shifts a few of the open holes (1 and 2), so you begin your round with three field holes and end with four in a row


~ Most of the course is cart-friendly, but there are some very steep hills to navigate in the middle of the back nine




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14 0
Line Hunter
Experience: 26.1 years 4 played 4 reviews
3.50 star(s)

Tough & Technical drive by

Reviewed: Updated: Played on:Jun 27, 2022 Played the course:5+ times

Pros:

- Adds a different style course to Lancaster County.
- Majority of course is wooded, with tight, technical lines.
- Not a huge elevation area, but it feels like it because the elevation changes in the land are used well.
- The handful of open holes let you air a few out.
- Not the hardest course, but it's tough to score well. Easy to pick up a bogie, tough to pick up a birdie.
- Maximizes available land.
- Forces you to hit tight gaps off the tee.
- Hole 4 is a fun, open, downhill par 3 with OB behind the basket.

Cons:

- The lines aren't the only thing that's tight. The holes are tightly-packed onto land that is just a little too small for 18 holes. Other fairways are often in play. Property line OB is uncomfortably close on two holes.
- Some tee pads are not flat. The turf is nice enough.
- Still new, so this will improve, but the fairways still need some clean up.
- A few spots where a vine, branch, or tiny tree will take a fair line and make it way tougher than it needs to be. Not sure if this is by design or just not yet finished.
- Hole 10 has the potential to be a great hole, but needs "something" to create fairer lines. Takes an absolutely amazing shot to get to the green. Maybe one or two small trees being removed could make a difference.

Other Thoughts:

This is a fun course and good addition to the area. It has a little bit of an identity question though. Distances and pars point to it being an Am-friendly course, but the lines off the tee can be Pro-level tough. Some of the wooded holes are very tight off the tee, which could be frustrating for ams. The open holes push the distance enough to make them unreachable for shorter arms. The idea is obviously to make it as challenging as possible given the space. So does that make this a pro-friendly or an am-challenging short course? Or both? With only one tee and one basket per hole, it needs to be both. You'll have to judge for yourself if it succeeds.
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16 0
Caelstrom
Bronze level trusted reviewer
Experience: 13.1 years 33 played 13 reviews
3.50 star(s)

A Fun Beginner/Intermediate Addition to the Lancaster Circuit drive by

Reviewed: Updated: Played on:Jun 18, 2022 Played the course:once

Pros:

I was pleasantly surprised by Fairview Park's disc golf course. For a park and course that is not exactly on the beaten path, the amenities and course maintenance here were definitely above par.

- Tee pads were outdoor carpet over gravel. The carpet in most cases was firmly affixed to the beams that were used to create the pad. They provided ample room for a variety of different driving styles.

- Baskets were clearly marked and an easily visible bright yellow.

- Tee signs were professional and very informative. To me, good signage is one of those things that separates a lot of decent courses from really good ones. There were no next tee arrows on the baskets, but frequent next tee signs around the course made following the course pretty easy.

- A good mix of more open holes with many wooded ones. The designers did their best to bring interest into what would otherwise be long wide-open drives by pinching off one side (Hole 1), creating a narrow gap off the drive (Hole 2), creating a narrow alley with marked OB (Hole 3), or utilizing mandos/elevation changes (Holes 4 and 5).

- A large and detailed course map greets players before the first hole, providing a good overview of course navigation right off the bat.

- The park has many amenities beyond disc golf (ample parking, nice bathrooms, pavilions, a roller hockey rink, playgrounds, ball fields, etc.), but the course is well-designed such that only the most errant of throws would interfere with other park activity.

- The average hole length on this course makes most of the holes beginner/intermediate friendly, while a smattering of longer holes (3 and 18 for example), will give experienced players a chance to show off some big bombs.

- The course maintenance here was pretty impressive. Even the rough in the woods had been cleared back pretty well, such that you really had to misplace a throw to find yourself in really rough overgrowth. That being said, poison ivy was out and about in many places, so look before you reach.

Cons:

- My biggest complaint about this course is that the gravel seems to have settled underneath the carpet on several of the tees pads, creating some significant unevenness and dips in many of the pads. Because the carpet is nailed down to the beams, gravel cannot be added to level these sections out. This occasionally made my run-ups a bit unsteady.

- There were not many (if any) benches spread throughout the course, and there were definitely no trash cans on the course. Small issues, I know, but ones that really separate the good courses from the great ones.

- Experienced players will find the average hole length on this course to be shorter than they might prefer, and they may not feel as challenged as they might like.

- Hole 2 was the only hole that I found somewhat boring, mostly because the "hazard" areas shown on the hole map were not marked in the field and could not be used in any practical sense.

Other Thoughts:

I really enjoyed Fairview Park's course, and I will definitely add it to my list frequently visited courses.
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