Wow, I haven't been back to Green Lane for years before this course came up. I might be outing my age, but back in the day they used to have a beach on Snyder Road right before the dam, the opposite side of the lake where this course starts. Those summers were the days as a kid, complete with concession stand and beach balls. Now the sand is gone but DG is year round!
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This is a long course perfect for those cannon arms out there, the distances are comparable to Nockamixon in Quakertown or back 18 Roland Park NE of Lancaster. It's definitely not a course you decide to go to an hour before dark, first-timers should figure about 150 minutes of playing time.
The overall layout starts from the lake, and it goes on up to encompassing the entire hillside northwards, across Green Lane Rd, until the Marino Equestrian Campground Parking Lot on Hill Road.
Almost every hole has two tees, huge and generous. Artificial mini-golf style turf on concrete. It's been holding up nicely the last year. The tee signs are gorgeous and well illustrated. There are two layouts, blue baskets for distance and extra challenging trajectories. Yellow baskets are paired with the closer tees, truncating the holes on both ends but still challenging, none-the-less.
The front three and the very last hole are semi to open and flattish. Once across the street, elevation in a mix ranging from heavy forest to open comes into play until #8. From there, it gives a very Nockamixon vibe through to #16 meaning rocky, extreme elevation changes, distance. Fairways are often carved right next to each other, here.
HyooMac has accurately described the good holes, except I liked the steep downhill fraternal twins #12 & #16 and I loved #17. #12 is much more tunnel of the two, and a precise throw can find itself floating way past the basket. #16 doesn't require the same accuracy, but making it to circle's edge without fading at the end keeps eluding me. #17 is a slight downhill straight on that really doglegs sharp back left and downwards into a spiral. Perfect for someone with a good distance rhbh spike hyzer, I suppose, but it seems the disc has equal chance of going AWOL and never be seen again with all the brush about.
The best part of this course is how involved the community is with this place and it will certainly mature into something special over the years and get over any teething problems quickly. It fills a DG niche in the area comparable to many of the better state park courses.