Central Texas's outdoor recreation infrastructure is substantially better than most people realize before moving here. The Hill Country terrain, spring-fed creeks, and the Brushy Creek watershed have produced a trail and park system that supports genuine outdoor recreation without driving to the Hill Country. Here's the complete guide.
Regional Trails
🚴 Brushy Creek Regional Trail — Round Rock & Cedar Park
The Brushy Creek Regional Trail is the flagship trail system for Williamson County — 15 miles of paved trail following the Brushy Creek watershed through both Round Rock and Cedar Park. The trail is well-maintained, well-lit in major sections, and passes through sections of genuine natural beauty including wooded creek bottoms and meadow areas that contrast with the surrounding suburban development. Multiple parking access points throughout. Dog-friendly with waste stations. Excellent for running, cycling, and family walks. The trail connects Old Settlers Park, Brushy Creek Lake Park, and multiple neighborhood park connections.
Best entry point: Meadows Drive entrance near Old Settlers Park for the longest connected run.
🚶 Georgetown Trail System & Lake Georgetown
Georgetown has developed a trail network that includes the San Gabriel River Trail and access to Lake Georgetown's shoreline trails managed by the US Army Corps of Engineers. The San Gabriel River Trail provides creek-side walking in the Georgetown urban core. Lake Georgetown's trails include the Good Water Loop — a 25-mile trail around the entire lake that is one of the most significant hiking trail loops in Williamson County for serious hikers and trail runners.
Best Parks
⚾ Old Settlers Park — Round Rock
Old Settlers Park is Williamson County's most comprehensive municipal park — 645 acres with athletic fields for every sport, disc golf, ponds for fishing, playground structures across multiple age levels, picnic areas with pavilions, and the Williamson County Regional Park complex. The scale of the facility gives it a non-suburban character. The bass fishing in the ponds is genuinely productive. The disc golf course is well-maintained and free.
🏊 Brushy Creek Lake Park — Cedar Park
Cedar Park's most beautiful park centers on a lake with kayak and paddleboard rentals, a 3-mile trail loop around the lake, fishing access, and the natural shoreline setting that makes it feel removed from the suburban context. The kayak rental operation is seasonal. The trail loop is flat and accessible for all fitness levels. Dogs are welcome on the trail.
🦢 Lake Georgetown (Stillhouse Hollow & Georgetown Lake)
Georgetown's Lake Georgetown, managed by the US Army Corps of Engineers, offers the full lake park experience: camping at Cedar Breaks Park, boat ramps, fishing, hiking trails, and swimming areas in designated zones. Bass and crappie fishing are strong. The lake is significantly less crowded than the Highland Lakes despite being equally accessible from central Williamson County.
The Hill Country Within Reach
Within 90 miles of Round Rock, you can reach Inks Lake State Park (one of Texas's best state parks — book reservations at texasstateparks.reserveamerica.com well in advance), Enchanted Rock State Natural Area (timed entry required), Pedernales Falls State Park, and the Barton Creek Greenbelt accessed from Austin. The outdoor recreation options within a half-day drive of Central Texas are genuinely extraordinary.
- Brushy Creek trail at dawn: The trail's natural sections are at their best in the first hour of daylight — wildlife is more active, the light is beautiful, and the Texas heat hasn't arrived yet.
- Disc golf at Old Settlers: The Old Settlers Park disc golf course is free and well-maintained. Arrive early on weekends — it gets busy by mid-morning with casual players and groups.
- Lake Georgetown fishing: The North San Gabriel arm of Lake Georgetown consistently produces good largemouth bass in the 2-4 lb range. Early morning topwater fishing in spring is productive. Bank fishing access is available at multiple Cedar Breaks Park locations.