There are parks, and then there are places that feel like they were built specifically for the kind of afternoon you did not know you needed. Harry Myers Park, tucked into a quiet residential stretch of central Garland off Brand Road, is absolutely the latter. I stumbled onto it during a lazy Saturday drive, and I have been returning ever since — sometimes with a fishing rod, sometimes with nothing more than a cup of coffee and a good book.
Spread across more than 100 acres, Harry Myers is Garland’s largest municipal park, and it wears that title graciously rather than boastfully. The centerpiece is a genuinely lovely lake — calm, tree-lined, and stocked with catfish, bass, and perch that seem almost cooperative on a cool morning. Families set up folding chairs along the bank while kids dangle lines over the water with the kind of focused optimism that only children and seasoned anglers ever really master. A Texas freshwater fishing license is all you need to join them, and the vibe along that shoreline is about as relaxed as it gets anywhere in the Metroplex.
But fishing is only the beginning of the conversation here. The park features a network of walking and jogging trails that wind through mature trees and open meadows — the kind of green space that reminds you why people chose to build a city in North Texas in the first place. The trails connect smoothly to picnic pavilions, open playgrounds, and a disc golf course that draws a surprisingly dedicated crowd of players ranging from teenagers testing out new drivers to retirees who have clearly been throwing discs since before it was cool.
Speaking of cool — Harry Myers has one of the most beloved community swimming pools in Garland, open during summer months and almost irresistibly refreshing when temperatures climb into the nineties. The pool complex is well-maintained and family-friendly, with separate areas for lap swimmers and little ones who are mostly just there to splash each other.
What genuinely sets this park apart from similarly-sized green spaces across the region is the sense of community layered into every corner of it. Weekend mornings bring out youth soccer leagues on the open fields. Evenings attract couples walking dogs along the lake path. Holiday weekends fill the pavilions with multigenerational gatherings where you can smell someone’s brisket from three picnic tables away and feel zero guilt about it.
Harry Myers Park does not demand anything dramatic from you. It simply opens its gates and lets you decide what kind of day you want to have. That kind of unpretentious generosity is rarer than it sounds — and in a city the size of Garland, finding it in a place this beautiful feels like a genuine gift. Pack a lunch, bring sunscreen, and plan to stay longer than you intended. You will.