Pros:
-- Two sets of tee pads per hole (except No. 9, which is missing) give you some options. You can easily see the longer tees (concrete) and the shorter tees, which are natural and have circular wooden markers about a foot off the ground.
-- Makes decent use of the land available.
-- Restrooms (and I assume water) are available at the baseball fields next to the course.
-- Water is in play on a few holes (mostly 1 and 9).
-- The dry pond on No. 7 described by someone else as an easy carry was not an easy carry for me (I was short and left), but I still liked the hole.
-- Suspended basket on No. 5 offers some challenge/interest on what is otherwise a 350-foot throw in an open field.
Cons:
-- The baskets are not numbered and some are close together, so navigation was an issue. We overlooked a small marker on the ground pointing toward No. 1, which tees off near the picnic tables several hundred feet away from the parking area. If you start with No. 5 (the closest tee to the parking lot), you will start AND end closer to the parkng lot than if you play 1-9.
-- Speaking of parking, it is very limited.
-- Hole 3's tee is very close to people's backyards, which brings the barking and aggressive-looking dogs into play.
-- Holes 2 and 3 are so close together and on several of my second shots on No. 2, I would have been in danger of being hit by a drive from No. 3 had anyone else been playing. And I had not missed the mando.
-- In the long position, the No. 3 basket has no real path to it for the final 50-75 feet. Just get close, then throw and hope.
Other Thoughts:
-- Good to see a course in an area not well served, but this is not close to being a destination course. If I lived in this neighborhood, I would walk over and play. If I'm already in my car, I'm probably driving elsewhere.