• Yoga in the Park

    Enjoy your Saturday morning by participating in a free weekly yoga session at Grays Lake this summer. The class will be from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. every Saturday May 25 through September 28. Local volunteer teachers lead each session, which means you’ll have a different yoga experience each week! Come join the fun and relax with us!

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  • Imagination Playground

    Imagination Playground will be at the following locations 10am - 1pm.

    Monday - Tower Park

    Tuesday - Des Moines Library, Central Branch

    Wednesday - Union Park

    Thursday - Pete Crivaro Park

    Friday - Grandview Park

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    Park Locations

  • Show Your Gray's Lake Love

    You may not have ever run a marathon, but if you've walked the 1.9 mile loop at Gray's Lake, you need one of these. For $5, get a sticker and proudly display your love of the lake. Available at the Gray's Lake concession stand now - get yours today!

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  • Dancing at the Lake

    It doesn’t matter if you've got two left feet or can shake your groove thing, the new summer social dance series at Gray’s Lake Park called “Dancing at the Lake” has a little something for everyone. Thursdays, June - August starting at 7:30pm

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  • Free Flicks

    Free Flicks is a summer-long series of outdoor movie showings throughout Des Moines area parks and facilities.

    The films will be shown on our 25-foot portable screen, and will begin after sunset around 9pm. Blankets and lawn chairs are encouraged.

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  • Signup Online for Swimming Lessons Now!

    We are pleased to announce that this year's sign up for swimming lessons will be online! Just as in previous years, class sizes are restricted. In order to get your preferred session, sign up now using the link below.

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    Register Here

  • Have More Fun for Less Money

    Greater Des Moines Recreational Activity Scholarship Program(GRASP) is the program formerly known as “Experience Greater Des Moines.” The GRASP card is your ticket to reduced costs for Parks programs, as well as other community activities and programs. Income guidelines apply.

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    Get Your GRASP Card

  • National Park and Recreation Month Bridge Event

    Come celebrate National Park and Recreation Month with us Saturday morning, July 13 on Court Avenue bridge. Have fun playing games and winning prizes while learning more about the activities and programs Des Moines Parks and Recreation offers. There is something for everyone to do at this celebration.

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Trained professional burn crew performing prescribe burn.Prescribed Burn Program

 

 

In nature fire is essential to maintain the integrity of the native prairie and woodland plant species located in our parks.  Fire is a natural occurrence that helps the plant and animal communities in a park and controlled burning offers a safer way to use fire in a helpful manner.  The benefits of prescribed burns include:

 

Aid in reducing the undesirable plants from invading our prairie and woodlands

Help maintain a rich diversity of wildflowers and grasses

Encourage oak and other native trees to naturally regenerate in our woodlands

Decrease threat of a wildfire by decreasing the accumulation of combustibles

Benefit water quality by aiding in the establishment of deep-rooted natives

Improve the natural beauty and enjoyment of our parks

 

Experienced park staff conduct the prescribed burns.  The Parks Burn Crew has been certified in accordance with a nationally-standardized testing program for professionals participating in wild-land burns.  Park staff members have studied fire behavior and fire control techniques to ensure the safety of the burn crew, residents and private property. 

 

See the list of prescribed burn plans to learn more about the various burn plans in place for the park and trail systems.

 

Ewing Park                                       Grays Lake                       Pioneer Park                                 Union Park

Gay Lea Wilson Trail North               Greenwood Park                   Prospect Park                                    Waveland Golf Course

Gay Lea Wilson Trail South              MacRae Park                       Sargent Park                                    Witmer Park

Glendale Cemetery                           McHenry Park                       Des Moines Softball Complex               Woodlawn Park

Grandview Park                               Meredith Trail                     Tonawanda Drive

 

 

Patch of garlic mustardInvasive Plant Management

 

In November of 2007 the Des Moines Park and Recreation Department began measures to control garlic mustard, an aggressive biennial plant that is an increasing threat to the aesthetics and ecological integrity of the woodlands in the city’s Greenwood and Ashworth Parks, located from 45th to 49th Streets, between Grand Avenue and the Raccoon River.  Initial eradication efforts will involve herbicide application when the temperature is above freezing this fall through early spring; native plants will be dormant, but the garlic mustard plants will remain green and photosynthesizing.  Native plants, which emerge later in the spring, will not be affected by the herbicide because the glyphosate herbicide, known on the retail market by such brand names as Roundup, is not residual in the soil.  As is typically the case with herbicide applications, people are asked to stay off treated areas for 24 hours following treatment; dated signs along major entries to the park areas indicate when those portions will be again be available for use.

 

Intensive follow-up efforts using multiple control techniques over the course of the next four to five years are necessary in order to deplete the seed bank of the garlic mustard in the soil.  Measures will include spring prescribed burns, further herbicide applications and cutting of plants.  Thereafter, continued monitoring and routine maintenance as well as eradication by property owners adjacent to the parks will be necessary to prevent another outbreak of garlic mustard.

 

A native of Europe, the rapidly spreading plant was introduced in the United States in the mid-1800s for medicinal and herbal purposes and has no native predatory insects or other natural controls to curb its rapid spread in this country. Growing tall and dense within a few years, it crowds out woodland understory plants such as wildflowers, ferns and tree seedlings as well as wildlife habitat.  Garlic mustard prefers shaded and semi-shaded areas, and spreads most rapidly in highly-disturbed areas such as along trails, waterways and forest edges.  According to Cathy Mabry McMullen, Ph.D, adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Iowa State University,
 

Natural Resource Inventory

The Snapshot is a periodic look into the natural resource inventory being conducted of the city's park and open space system in 2011.  Click here for the newsletter.