Long
Trout Disc Golf Course Description (in Disc-Golfer Lingo)
The course is
set on the property behind the home of Tom and Kim Leibensperger, and the first
tee launches from the patio of their winery. The course was designed by Skeeter
Hoffman, and prior descriptions of it playing like South Mountain are somewhat
accurate, in that the course looks like South Mountain did when it was
installed in 1997, long before the masses opened everything up. There are some
steep hills, a few rocks, but certainly very narrow fairways. The fairways on
the tightest holes are only six or seven feet wide, and as with all new
courses, there's a lot of little stuff if you get off the fairway. With a
perfect throw, however, you can reach the basket of all the holes, as most are
in the 200-300 foot range and the longest is about 350 feet. The first five
holes wind their way up through the woods, and hole six plays directly
downhill. Holes seven and eight are anhyzers / lefty hyzers that play in an
open field, and hole nine throws through a tight gauntlet and then over the koi
pond behind the house!
The back nine plays similarly, with the holes tick-tacking their way up the
hill until holes 15 and 16 play severely downhill and back to the open. Hole
#17 is an instant classic - it's only 200 feet long, but you must throw through
a mando (mandatory)of two large trees spaced only about ten feet apart, about
halfway to the pole hole. The aforementioned pole hole hangs from the barn. The
local rule is that any shot that does not pass through the mando incurs a
penalty stroke, although with the barn wall right behind the basket as a
backstop, there's no reason not to go for the ace run. Hole #18 ends with a
pole hole position perched precariously above the pond, and any ace run that misses
will certainly result in "fish food."
The course has nice mix of gravel tee pads and wooden tee decks. Tee signs and tee direction arrows on each of
the 18 cement pole holes make it a self-directed course. Amateurs and pros alike will experience the
utmost technical challenge. Course
improvements are an on-going labor of love.