The first four holes, remnants of the original course, play up, then across, a large, open hill, with a few trees and a patch of woods providing some obstacles. New holes 5-8 initially play upon the top, then partially down the flank, of the wooded portion of the hill. Number-9 (former-7) is a big, open downhiller, needing a left fade to find the basket.
The rawer/rougher back nine starts by playing from an slighly elevated position, down then left-turning into a flat area prone to dampness. Some elevation is gained on upslope/wooded #11, while number-12 presents you with a mini-valley shot, around increasingly larger hardwoods. More hardwoods in denser woods are the challenged offered by #13, and its fast green (hope your disc finds the large log it it starts rolling down the hill, possibly all the way to the road in the distance). 14-16 play upon the plateau of the hill, in small glades containing hordes of much smaller trees. Number-17 is sharp-dropping to a basket in a mini-meadow, and the final hole is open initially, with a choice of late windows to throw through to find the basket.
Favourite hole: #7. A left-to-right, rolling slope with scattered hardwoods, a gentle right|left turner, depending upon which tee you choose, will be needed to reach the basket, sitting on a very fast green.
!Favourite hole: #3. The anti-camber, low-and-tight throwing lane leads to a wall of trees, supported by a jailcell. While I've always hated this hole, your mileage may vary.
Over the past few years, the course has evolved from a single-basket, natural tee, okay niner, with one long, fun open downhill shot, to an awesome course, with many wooded holes, improved teepads and signage, extra baskets, and additional positions, joining the ranks of Maryland's top courses.