Colleyville Nature Center

A compact but well-designed nature center with paved and unpaved trails looping through forest and around a small pond. The nature playscape lets little kids build with natural materials and the small indoor exhibit area has live reptiles and amphibians. It is a perfect low-key outing for toddlers and preschoolers who are building their stamina for longer hikes.

February 19, 2026 · map[email:hello@adventurehackers.com name:AdventureHackers]

Jesse H. Jones Park & Nature Center

A 312-acre park along Spring Creek where families can hike boardwalk trails through bottomland forest and swamp habitat without driving far from Houston. The nature center has live animal exhibits featuring local species and the staff runs free guided canoe trips and nature programs year-round. The Redbud Trail boardwalk through the cypress swamp is magical and kids are fascinated by the knobby cypress knees poking up from the water.

February 19, 2026 · map[email:hello@adventurehackers.com name:AdventureHackers]

John Bunker Sands Wetland Center

A beautifully designed wetland preserve southeast of Dallas where kids can walk boardwalks over marshes teeming with herons and turtles. The visitor center has interactive exhibits about wetland ecology and water conservation. Guided bird walks and nature programs rotate seasonally and the staff is excellent at engaging younger visitors.

February 19, 2026 · map[email:hello@adventurehackers.com name:AdventureHackers]

Sheldon Lake State Park & Environmental Learning Center

A surprisingly wild 2,800-acre park on the east side of Houston built around a 1,200-acre reservoir that is a magnet for wading birds and alligators. The pond dipping station and hands-on nature exhibits inside the learning center are designed specifically for kids. An observation tower gives panoramic views over the wetlands and the fishing ponds are stocked and free to use.

February 19, 2026 · map[email:hello@adventurehackers.com name:AdventureHackers]

Bob Jones Nature Center & Preserve

A 758-acre preserve protecting one of the last intact stretches of Cross Timbers forest in North Texas. The trails are short (topping out around two miles) and easy enough for toddlers, which makes this an excellent first hiking spot for very young families. Over 1,100 species of plants and animals have been documented here, and the nature center runs hands-on programs for kids throughout the year that are consistently well-organized and engaging.

February 18, 2026 · map[email:hello@adventurehackers.com name:AdventureHackers]