Pros:
Vandalia DGC is a short recreational 9 that snakes around other park amenities. This will be a putter-midrange course for most players of any experience but is a good spot for new players to get the hang of the game.
Location of Vandalia is about 20-25 minutes east of Route 61 and Bowling Green, the closest access point most folks would be using in the area. Tri-County Park is off Union St. which can be accessed by going sound on Clark St. as you go along Route 54 in town. There are a couple gas stations in town, along with a DQ. There's also a women's correctional facility behind the town welcome sign, which feels like unfortunate placement.
Park Amenities include walking paths, an exercise trail, an aquatic center, tennis and pickleball courts, playground equipment, and bathrooms.
Course Equipment that is present is in decent shape. The signs have distances, pars, and a very basic hole layout with next hole directions. The baskets are white Dynamic Patriots and are in great shape being only about 4-5 years old. Hole 1 has a course map as well which is handy and also helps point out the awkward transition from hole 1 to hole 2.
Course Design is geared around short and mostly wide-open holes, which is about the only design that would fit in this park. While a couple of holes have more intentional angles, you're mostly fine with straight shots or whatever you are most comfortable throwing.
Shot-Shaping can be found on hole 1 with a bit of an anhyzer and hole 2 with a left or right hook around a tree. That's about it.
Distances range from around 130 to 225, making this a nice putter or putter-midrange course. I took out all of my drivers from my bag for my round, and I honestly could have gotten away with just a putter, a berg, and a buzzz and still felt like I was carrying too many discs.
Difficulty is definitely geared towards new players, with birdies being very gettable on every hole. If you can throw over 250 accurately, you're going to really challenge for a 9 under at this course.
Cons:
Course Design is very bland feeling, which just comes with the limitations of the park. There's aren't many open areas with trees in spots that can make for creative lines. That being said, it doesn't make for much fun during a round here.
Course Safety is something that comes to mind on a few holes, as the course often plays close to the walking paths around the park. Hole 2 mostly plays directly along a path, as does hole 7, with 7 also going over an exercise station. If you're going to have a course where every hole is essentially 150 to 200 feet long and wide open anyways, there's a few spots in the park where holes could have been placed that aren't so close to other park uses. The park does get plenty of use based on my round here, especially in the summer with the pool, so even jut moving hole 7's pin and turning hole 2 a bit would go a long way to avoid issues.
Course Equipment is fine, but missing tees, which makes it hard to tell where to throw. Not the biggest issue in the world, but on some holes like hole 1, it can make a big difference.
Other Thoughts:
This course along with Twin Pike YMCA are smack dab in the halfway point of Quincy, IL and St. Louis; too far to really warrant their own trip from where I live, but too far to really play while we visit my in-laws in Quincy. Given we have two dogs that are terrible on a leash and now a baby as well, stopping on a 40-minute detour during a 2-hour drive isn't really in the cards either. I have stared at these courses on the map for four years waiting to bag this course, and yesterday, I was given a golden opportunity to get up and finally check this course off the list. And what a gloriously bland round it was. Longing to play a course like this really tells me a lot about myself.
I came, I played, and I will never go to Vandalia again. Not worth going out of your way for unless you're a course bagger that likes bland 9-holes.