Pros:
Minimal chance to lose a disc. Glow/safari possibilities.
Cons:
Grass tees defined by paint, so can be difficult to locate. Flat-n-short. Basket #2 missing several rows of chains. Plays in the open space and near playing fields of a middle school, so not playable during school hours.
Other Thoughts:
To find the next tee area, follow the painted arrow on/next to the basket you just finished. Here's a brief navigation/course guide - all distances are visual estimates:
Find basket #7 to the left of the tennis courts. Follow the arrow to tee #8, in the middle of the parking lot. Basket #8 is 150' away, towards the school.
Find tee #9 in the open space, 50' away. Basket #9 is toward the corner of the school, 200' away.
Back towards the open space to find tee #1. Basket #1 is up on the mini plateau, just in front of a small group of trees, 250' away.
Tee #2 is to the left on th eother side of the trees, but basket #2 is to the right at the end of the trees, a 175' right-turner.
Tee #3 slightly left towards a parking lot, basket #3 slightly right, making this a very short shot - maybe 125'.
Tee #4 is to the right, basket #4 farther, on the other side of a large tree. Left- or right-turner, 175'.
Tee #5 is on the right-field foul-line of the small baseball field, with the basket behind the higher fence which serves as the backstop of home plate - definitely a turn-n-drop shot, 200'
Tee #6 is also near a foul-line (if memory serves), an dis the longest hole at about 300'. The basket sits in front of the near fence of the tennis courts.
Tee #7 is not too far away, in the open, with the basket down-n-behind the tennis court fence. 200', sharp left-turner.
This course reminds me of the made-up object courses, using fences as obstacles, we would play with frisbees back in the mid-70s.