Pros:
--Concrete tees
--Good use of guardian trees, with many more trees planted
--Excellent course for beginners and wild throwers. It's pretty much impossible to lose a disc except in the water.
--Significant tree planting in progress, obviously a multi-year effort with positioning definitely focused on DG as opposed to just park beautification
Cons:
--Course begins and ends along side tennis/pickleball courts and pool. Potential for noise.
--Not obvious from available tools where one should enter this park (West Side, at intersection of Adams St and 11th Ave)
--Minimal signage on tees, some "next tee" signs, but you need GPS navigation your first few times through
Other Thoughts:
As it currently stands, in the fall of 2023, this is a good beginner/intermediate course laid out over a large parcel of relatively flat open land, dotted by some middle aged conifers, oaks and some faster growing deciduous trees. Most shots are open, with the baskets clearly visible from the tee, and little opportunity to lose a disc.
Elevation is not a factor at all, with the singular exception of a downhill shot off the tee of 13, atop a conical mound which appears to be a grassed over pile of excavated soil from the nearby pool and tennis structures. I should have used my Apple Watch to measure its height but did not--I would place it in the 40-60 ft range, with a 230 ft shot down into a copse of guardian trees surrounding the basket. An ace would be possible, but very difficult. I (dx) Buzzzed by it hotly on my second round and was still stuck with a par.
You throw over a cat-tailed pond on #7. I am a late middle-aged beginner with less than 20 rounds under my belt, throwing max 250 at this point. I turned over a Dragon on my first 18, but there's a beast who floats, so I got it back with a 16 ft retriever and a pair of wet calves. On my second 18, I cleared easily, and sent it long off the basket. The short tees avoid this cross, but still keep the pond in play on the left side. #8 runs along the long axis of this same pond, and may grab an occasional errant shot. #17 uses a smaller pond similarly,--a par 3 off a low-ceilinged tee with the pond not crossing, but close to the green on the right side.
Roughly 1/3 of the course abuts the main public attractions of the park--an aquatic center, playground, tennis and pickleball courts. I played on a weekday, relatively early in the morning, when school was in session. Under these conditions, the park was nearly empty. 2PM on a hot summer day would likely yield a different experience.
The other 2/3rd of the course drapes itself over open land interspersed with some trees, predominantly oaks and some conifers. An asphalt walking path traverses the course, populated mostly by dog walkers and other casual exercisers, who mostly ignore disc golf play, but some stop to watch occasionally. Their presence is minimal, but the opportunity exists for a rare shot to land on asphalt. Besides that walking path, no other park feature exists on this land. This is important: the city looked at their resources and decided to dedicate a sizable parcel to disc golf AND NOTHING ELSE. I would love to see the whole course design tweaked to place all 18 holes on this southern area of the park, getting away from the higher traffic areas. I think the available land would easily accommodate that re-design without loss of length.
The mature trees on the course are smartly used as guardians. Several holes encircle the basket with trees, sparse enough to make the target accessible, but calling for creative shot shaping.
This is where it gets good: the city of Shakopee is planting new trees all over the course--I estimated 5-10 per hole--almost exclusively oaks. Some are obviously recent--three to five feet high, but others are already above 10 and starting to fluff out. It takes oaks a while to develop their root system in the harsh Minnesota climate, but once they do, their growth can shift from barely noticeable to 3-5 feet per year. I think this course will play differently year over year into 2024, and by 2030 will be an entirely different fanged beast of a challenge.
Is it going to be the destination course of the area? Well, no, but it will be quite excellent for what it is, a free public park course in a third-ring suburb of Minneapolis on mostly flat ground. It's already excellent for beginners and intermediate players. I think eventually it will provide a draw for those of a higher level.