Estimated time
Est. time
Estimated length
Est. length
Elevation
Elevation
Moderate difficulty
About the course
Not recommended for individuals with limited mobility
This course has rough terrain and is not accessible for persons with disabilities. There are steep rock paths and dirt trails throughout the course.
Course designers
Time your trip
Course traffic - Players usually spend 1.5 - 2.5 hours here.
Want access to real-time course traffic?It's on UDisc Pro.
Contact
Grand Valley Disc Golf Club
Location
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Contact
Grand Valley Disc Golf Club
Time your trip
Course traffic - Players usually spend 1.5 - 2.5 hours here.
Want access to real-time course traffic?It's on UDisc Pro.
What's in the area
4.1
4.2
4.0
4.2
3.6
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Reviews
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@jmor72
Pay attention to OBs and bring lots of water

@dougynerd
Typical BLM "I didn't talk to anyone who actually plays disc golf" course. To the designers, if you read this: If you don't have trees, you need elevation changes, at least for any kind of open land course. In a park, you can get away with it because you can create artificial obstacles with walking paths, landscaping, and roads. On an open land course, you need something--anything--that creates a better play experience than "throw Frisbee, look through the bushes for 10 minutes to find it, throw Frisbee again". I was actually excited when I first arrived, as the actual hiking trail you have here would make an amazing course. Hills that you don't want to face off of, gullies and crags that would create interesting obstacles, pretty rocks and views to create a great backdrop, with some river trees to come in and out of. All that said, if you wanted to save the course, instead of finding some new Land for it, you could do some work with a brush hog and a trail crew, creating some actual fairways and defined out of bounds. If you take a look at Birds Nest Park near Denver, you'll get an idea of what kind of work and care it would take to make this into something. Instead, though? I would honestly take some of the land you have in a canyon or with all sorts of rocks all around it and try to reuse the baskets there. Take a look at Three Peaks in Cedar City to find a great example of a BLM course that was professionally designed.
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