Pros:
Serene woods setting, length
Other Thoughts:
The Greene County course is like camping; perfect for those that both want to get close to nature, and also derive a certain pleasure from being punished by nature. And also like camping, one of the best parts is leaving, satisfied you survived and looking forward to returning to your usual, more comfortable places, strengthened by the experience of roughing it.
The Greene County course starts off great, with a three fun holes playing across well mown fields and through a thickly forested streambed. These holes are pretty and perfect, open and long but with formidable obstacles demanding both placement and distance in your drives. But then by hole #4 the course moves into the woods and you don't come out until the very end. What awaits the disc golfer in these woods are 14 holes playing up and down, right and left, and generally long, with punishing rough and a generally unforgiving layout. Unless you possess wonderful control, prepare to spend some extra time and even to shed a little blood looking for your discs, because the designers of this course left no room for error and the landscape features an abundance of thorns, cedar trees, and otherwise thick, prickly undergrowth.
The course requires control, first and foremost, but does feature right and left hooking holes, up and downhill fairways, and a stream provides a worthy obstacle on several holes. Unlike several woods courses, this one is actually a bit long, and one of the best features of the course was the blue, white, and red tees for most holes, meaning you can adapt the course to your skill level. Most holes are 300 feet or more from the white and blue tees - the red tees are substantially shorter. And the course is both out in the country and deep in the hills, so it's perfectly serene. Perhaps as the course gets broken in a bit it will become a bit less punishing, but for now the Greene County course is perfect for those that are looking for some real exercise and don't mind getting a little (or a lot) scratched up in the course of a round.
Favorite Hole - #1 - Downhill though an opening over a wide, well protected streambed, then back uphill and to the right.