Flower Mound Parks & Trails: An Outdoor Guide
A local guide to Flower Mound's best parks, trails, and lake recreation — from Heritage Park to the legendary Northshore Trail.

Getting Outside in Flower Mound
Flower Mound has quietly built one of the most well-rounded outdoor recreation networks in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, with more than 66 miles of paved trails, two major lakes within reach, and parks suited to everything from a quiet Saturday morning walk to a full camping weekend. Whether you have lived here for years or are still learning the town’s geography, this guide covers the places worth knowing and what to expect when you show up.
Heritage Park: The Town’s Signature Green Space
Heritage Park of Flower Mound, located at 600 Spinks Rd., is the park most residents point to when someone asks where to start. It is an award-winning facility that packs a remarkable range of amenities into one destination. Families come for the Heritage Springs Splash Pad and the Fort Wildflower Playground, while others head straight for the 18-hole disc golf course or the performance pavilion. The Wildlife Encounter Trail, lined with bronze sculptures of animals native to North Texas, gives the park a distinctly local character that separates it from a generic municipal green space.
Twin Coves Park and Grapevine Lake
Sitting on 243 acres along the north shore of Grapevine Lake, Twin Coves Park and Campground is the place to go when you want more than a day trip. The park offers 19 furnished cabins and 22 RV slips, a small-craft boat ramp, two large pavilions, disc golf, hike and bike nature trails, and kayak rentals. A daily vehicle fee of $10 applies, with annual passes available at $45 for residents and $75 for non-residents. Beyond Twin Coves, Grapevine Lake itself draws water sports enthusiasts for wakeboarding, jet skiing, and water skiing across its expansive surface, making the northern shoreline one of the most active recreational corridors in the region.
The Northshore Trail: Mountain Biking and Hiking Along the Lake
The Northshore Trail has a reputation that extends well beyond Flower Mound’s borders. This 22.5-mile single-track system runs along the northern shoreline of Grapevine Lake from Rockledge Park in the east to Twin Coves Park in the west, and it is widely regarded as the premier mountain biking destination in North Texas. Managed by the Dallas Off-Road Bicycle Association in partnership with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the trail winds through thick hardwood forests and along the water’s edge, with regular sightings of fox, deer, rabbit, and waterfowl. Hikers use it as well, though cyclists are the dominant crowd on weekends.
The Town-Wide Trail System: Paved, Equestrian, and Natural Surface
What started as 3 miles of trail in 1989 has grown into more than 66 miles of 8-foot paved hike and bike trails woven throughout Flower Mound’s neighborhoods and open spaces. For those who prefer unpaved surfaces, there are 34.3 miles of natural hike and bike trails within U.S. Army Corps of Engineers property along the Grapevine Lake shoreline. Equestrian riders have 10.3 dedicated miles as well, a relatively rare feature for a suburban town of this size. The paved network connects neighborhoods to parks and retail areas, making it genuinely useful for commuting by bike or stroller, not just recreation.
Neighborhood Parks Worth Knowing
Two parks stand out for families and sports-minded residents looking for something closer to home. Stone Creek Park offers scenic creek views, wooden bridges, family picnic areas, and trail and creek access that makes it a natural escape without requiring a drive to the lake. Bakersfield Park functions more as a recreational hub, with multiple soccer fields, baseball diamonds, and walking trails that connect directly into surrounding neighborhoods. Both are part of the town’s broader All-Parks system, which covers the full inventory of maintained facilities.
Peters Colony Memorial Park: A Recent Addition
Opened in 2025, Peters Colony Memorial Park brings something genuinely new to Flower Mound’s park lineup. The space includes a veterans’ memorial area, free-standing memorial elements, an educational water feature, and native landscaping alongside nature-inspired playground equipment. Nature trails and pedestrian pathways connect the park directly to the Flower Mound Public Library, making it a practical destination that works for both contemplation and an afternoon out with kids. For a park that opened recently, it already has the feel of a place that will anchor its corner of town for a long time.
Planning Your Visit: Maps and Passes
The town maintains an interactive map and a full listing of parks, trails, and recreation resources at flowermound.gov/795/Parks-and-Trails. If you plan to visit Twin Coves Park more than a handful of times a year, the resident annual pass pays for itself quickly at $45. Trail conditions on the Northshore can vary after heavy rain, so checking DORBA’s forums or social channels before a mountain bike ride is a habit worth developing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where can I go mountain biking in Flower Mound?
The Northshore Trail along Grapevine Lake is the go-to option, offering 22.5 miles of single-track trail managed by the Dallas Off-Road Bicycle Association. It runs from Rockledge Park to Twin Coves Park and is considered one of the best mountain biking systems in North Texas.
Does Flower Mound have camping?
Yes. Twin Coves Park on the north shore of Grapevine Lake has 19 furnished cabins and 22 RV slips. A daily vehicle fee of $10 applies, and annual passes are available for residents and non-residents.
How many miles of trails does Flower Mound have?
The town has more than 66 miles of paved hike and bike trails, plus 10.3 miles of equestrian trails and 34.3 miles of unpaved natural-surface trails within Army Corps of Engineers property along Grapevine Lake.
What is the newest park in Flower Mound?
Peters Colony Memorial Park opened in 2025 and features a veterans’ memorial, native landscaping, an educational water feature, nature trails, and playground equipment, with a pedestrian connection to the Flower Mound Public Library.
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