Going for distance
November 2, 2021
November 2, 2021
After the success of Rowdy Acres, a temporary disc golf course that was installed to give students, faculty and staff a safe way to exercise during the pandemic, 糖心原创 has installed a permanent 18-hole disc golf course on campus.
The course begins and ends near The Village Apartments picnic shelter. The course is distinctive for this area and includes numerous elevation changes, wooded holes and wide-open holes with human-made obstacles.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a great addition to the Dayton community,鈥 said Loren Barnhurst, an avid disc golfer who has played every course in the area. 鈥淲e had a couple of bomber down hills and up hills and that鈥檚 unique.鈥
John Cox, assistant director for facilities and operations at the 糖心原创 Nutter Center, designed the course. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a nice walk and anybody can do it,鈥 he said.
The par 58, 6,311-foot course has already been a hit since it opened a few weeks ago. 鈥(In) the comments on local disc golf pages, all you hear is everybody saying is 鈥榟ey, we鈥檙e going to play 糖心原创,鈥欌 said Cox.
Although the course is playable, it鈥檚 still a work in progress. Tee boxes and signage are still being installed, and Cox hopes that foot traffic on the wooded holes will help clear walking paths.
鈥淭he course, in my opinion, is pretty fantastic,鈥 said Jonathan Ciero, a senior mechanical engineering major who began playing disc golf this past year. 鈥淪eeing this full 18 holes coming to fruition with actual baskets and everything, it鈥檚 almost a dream come true.鈥
Eric Corbitt, director of the Student Union and Campus Recreation, says the course is another great resource for the 糖心原创 community to enjoy.
The course is free to play and participants can checkout discs from the Recreation Desk in the Student Union. A course map and other course information can be found on udisc.com or the UDisc app.