Pros:
I made a weekend trip to Eastern Washington/Northern Idaho this past weekend and the first course I played was Cherry Hill. One of the first things I liked right away was the practice basket and the tee signs, which were a post with a very detailed look at each hole engraved in stone, very pretty, very cool, very affective. The course starts out on flat ground, a four hundred and something par four with o.b. left and right in the tennis courts and parking lot. The front nine makes it way around and up a big hill, pretty open along the way. Hole six is one of the best downhill throws I have ever seen as you get to the top of this hill with a wide open grass field as a fairway and five hundred and fifty feet away is the basket sitting in a very wooded tree section, this hole was a par four with good reason, although if you have a big arm it should be a par three for you. The back nine start with hiking up a hill next to power lines for holes nine and ten and after that the course changes quite a bit. The longer open style of the front nine gives way to very short but very technical holes that are both birdie able and bogey able depending on the tee shot. Hole eighteen is another nice downhill throw about two hundred and fifty feet, a little hyzer shot it was hard to not over throw the basket.
Cons:
The course is fairly new and not all of the tee signs are put in, the signs say who sponsored each hole so maybe not all of them have been sponsored yet. The tee pads could use some work, the rubber mats that they have work out fine but some of the natural tees and the concrete tees are rugged and short and holes located on hills have uneven pads. On hole number nine or ten the tee pads were so slanted up hill that you couldn't even achieve any kind of run up. Navigation was a little hard at the beginning, apparently hole number two is still being worked on so you currently have to play hole number eight twice but after that it gets easier but a few more signs pointing you in the right direction would have helped.
Other Thoughts:
There is a little bit of climbing I guess but it's not even close to my home course so I found the hills pretty easy to deal with but others may disagree with me on that assessment.