Maria Stein, OH

Marion Park

Permanent course
2.335(based on 3 reviews)
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4 0
markcasazza
Experience: 3 played 3 reviews
3.50 star(s)

Best course in the area for a newbie 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:Jun 18, 2017 Played the course:once

Pros:

As a newbie I really appreciate that the course is very well groomed. There is no walking around in high weeds for a stray disc except the 9th hole. I enjoy t he dense trees as it makes it more challenging with no risk of lost discs as you experiment with different approaches. The first 5 holes and 9th are all well shaded.

Cons:

Holes 6-8 are wide open shots and unplayable if there is a baseball game going on. I would upgrade the course to great if those holes were moved to the tree filled areas. It is very flat for miles in every direction. Expect the mid-west winds.

Other Thoughts:

This will be my go to course. Maybe after I'm no longer a newbie I'll have a different perspective, but for now and for me this is the best local course.
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3 0
SK45869
Experience: 41 years 14 played 5 reviews
1.50 star(s)

Nice Local Course for fun 2+ years drive by

Reviewed: Played on:Sep 20, 2016 Played the course:5+ times

Pros:

Much of the course is in a woods, so the cool shade is nice. The woods is mowed and maintained nicely. Very scenic.

Cons:

Holes 1-5: there are so many trees that there's no clear path to most of the holes. Last week they planted a new tree directly in front of the tee on hole 2.....dumb. Holes 6, 7, and 8 are in the open around the ball diamond and soccer fields. I was out there a few days ago and could not play those holes because of the sports activities going on. Hole 9 has a very poor tee area but is a challenging shot with a good clear path.

Other Thoughts:

I play this course because it's closest to my house. It would be so much better if they would reposition the baskets so there is a clear "fairway" or path to the hole. I wish all of the holes were in the woods too.
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3 0
sisyphus
Diamond level trusted reviewer
Experience: 12.7 years 398 played 383 reviews
2.00 star(s)

Int/Adv for a small town? 2+ years

Reviewed: Played on:Nov 10, 2014 Played the course:2-4 times

Pros:

This new community park course in Maria Stein, Ohio, boasts beautiful 9 (plus 1 practice), new chainstar baskets, readily visible and mostly informative signage, and some challenging distances through park woods, open fields and a tightly wooded finish. Kudos to the designer(s) for introducing the sport to this small town with such variety. You will need an Intermediate arm to reach most of the holes, and there's certainly one that's unlikely to see a deuce!

The lines of flight are varied, and player-determined, as you weave through the park trees, so you can try out left to right, right to left, s-shots, and your whole game, with no fear of losing a disc. For the most part, the lines of flight stay away from the many other park activities, though you'll want to keep an eye out for other park patrons for the holes that do cross the walking paths.

There are plenty of stone benches and other amenities here, as well as shade in the summer heat, and opportunities for wind practice the rest of the year. You are in the plains area of west-central Ohio, after all!

Cons:

Which also means there wasn't much of an opportunity to utilize much more than a little bit of slope, as the entire park is probably within 10' of elevation. When I stopped in to play, there hadn't yet been a map drawn up, so I added a first draft here, for course baggers like me to play their first time through.

The natural tees already show a little root exposure, so I hope upgrades are planned in the future. There is room to create alternate tees, as well, to give the nine even more variety!

I felt like the hole distances were a bit of an incongruous challenge for what would likely be the local young folks' first exposure to disc golf. If it were up to me, and allowed, I'd suggest pulling the wide open field shots (6,7&8), and clearing some more fun, technical lines in the woods on the west side of the park, and keep them in the 180-240' range. My reasoning would be to keep the interest of newer players, who aren't going to see much benefit from throwing a 4 (or 5), a 4 (or 5) & a 5 (or 6, or 7) to cover the wide open distances around the sports fields.

Other Thoughts:

Hole by hole, #1 starts to the right of the parking lot with a reachable 'lane' shot that runs maybe 5 or 6 feet downslope overall. Then look to your left.
#2 runs straight at the fence line, with three trees just past to the left of the basket. Walk to your left along the fence.
#3 angles back toward the playground, finishing just past the path. Then double back to your right all the way to the fence again.
#4 plays almost blind over the slight ridge, with a fun basket position elevated on a tree stump, just past the path. Then look to your left.
#5 plays back towards the parking lot, technically to the left of the two baskets in that direction (you could probably play the 9th basket as an alternate). You'll need to walk out to the third base side of the ball field on the right.
#6 is an open shot to the south,
#7 is an open shot to the west, and
#8 is a huge north-running line between the ball fields and the corn, finishing in the entry corner of the woods. Walk the path up to the right, round the bend, and when you get to the two boulders, look to your left.
#9 is a dedicated, narrow lane shot that bends about 30 degrees to the left for the last 90 feet of lane to the basket.
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