
Harris Lake County Park offers programs covering nature, history and recreational topics. Public programs are open for registration to the general public.
Registration for Public Programs & Reminders
Public Program Registration & Reminders
To register for one of our public programs, click the button below the program description to be taken to the registration page on our online registration website.
Having trouble registering for a program online? Contact the park office at 919-387-4342 or email us at harris.lake@wake.gov for assistance.
Important Program Reminders:
- For Family Programs, every participant must be registered online in advance.
- "Walk ups" (those not registered online but show up) may not be able to participate in the program. Register early!
- Pets, except service animals, are not permitted at programs.
- If a program has a minimum age, children who do not meet the minimum will not be allowed to participate. Children who do meet the age requirement must have a parent or guardian with them in the program. Age limits are established for safety and program content.
Self-Guided Activities
Geocaching

The hunt is on during this high-tech "treasure" hunting game, where park visitors come equipped with GPS devices in search of hidden geocaches! The geocaches located in Harris Lake County Park are hidden containers that have been approved by park staff and placed on park property for your exploration and enjoyment. Geocaches can be of varied sizes and hidden in easy to difficult-to-find places. Use GPS devices to help find these hidden containers and then record your find on the paper log provided in the geocache. Some geocaches have little items, such as toys and stickers, that you can collect and replenish as you play, so the activity can be a real "treasure hunt." This activity can be self-guided by getting coordinates from and bringing your own GPS unit, or you can participate in one of our scheduled 鈥淕eocaching 101鈥 public programs.
To learn more about geocaching, created by former Park Manager Christina Hester.
NEW in 2025!
There is a new addition to the Harris Lake County Park geocaches! Our newest cache is part of the Cache Odyssey, a nationwide geocaching journey which brings a unique, highly creative letterbox geocache to every state. These caches are specifically designed with everyone in mind and are fully accessible for those with mobility concerns. We are so honored to be the site of the North Carolina location for this cache as part of the East Central Region Geo Tour! If you're interested in finding this new cache, type "Cache Odyssey - North Carolina" in the search engine!
Placing a Geocache
Geocaching on 小黄鸭视频 County Park property is handled on a park-by-park basis. Please visit a specific park's website or contact them directly to learn about their geocaching policies.
Geocaching is an accepted recreational activity at Harris Lake County Park, though at this time, no additional/new geocaches will be approved until further notice. The park maintains a maximum number of caches on park property. Those wishing to establish a new cache must receive approval from Harris Lake County Park prior to placing a cache. To obtain the approval you must complete and submit a to the park office. Please refer to this form for more information.
Orienteering

If you love the outdoors, exploring and map reading, then orienteering is for you! Orienteering is the sport of navigating through an unfamiliar area using a map and perhaps a compass. The object is to make your way through a series of points identified on a map and return to the finish line in the shortest amount of time possible. The route of your journey is up to you.
Orienteering is sometimes called, 鈥渢he art of map and compass reading.鈥 This fun outdoor recreational activity dates back more than 100 years and uses 鈥渓ow-tech鈥 tools to navigate the landscape. Often set as a timed challenge, orienteering is a fun way to exercise and build wilderness survival skills. Finding the points and markers is a sort of 鈥渢reasure hunt鈥 for participants of all ages.
Harris Lake County Park鈥檚 Orienteering course includes a short course (5 waypoints) and a long course (16 waypoints) that navigate you to different parts of the park, including wooded, field and play areas. They are accessible at all times of the year that the park is open. You can use our as a guide for getting started, as well as our printable course sheets to fill in the points as you find them. Each point has a rubbing 鈥 try to collect them all!

Mobile Tours

Take a mobile tour and see the park through a new lens!
Harris Lake County Park has three interactive cell phone tours that you can access from home or while you're at the park. You can access each tour from its hyperlinked title below.
This tour was created to introduce some of the special trees we have in North Carolina and help you identify them in the future. This tour follows the paved trail around the Educational Garden and begins at the Cypress parking lot side of the garden.
Along this tour, you will learn about some of the history of the park, some of the plants in the garden, and great ways to help wildlife in your backyard.
Test your knowledge and learn more about some of our common trees.
Discover more about the plants and animals found at the park.
Explore life on a farm as you learn about one of the families that lived on the property before it became a park.
Mobile tours have also been developed for other park sites and you can view them all here.
For more activities you can enjoy from the comfort of your home, visit Harris Lake From Home and find all of our 小黄鸭视频 County Parks From Home pages at 小黄鸭视频 Parks From Home.
Go for a StoryWalk庐

Take a self-guided StoryWalk庐 at Harris Lake County Park! A StoryWalk庐 is a children鈥檚 book that is presented page by page along a trail or path. It combines the pleasures of reading a children's book while enjoying nature. Every other month, the paved trails in our Day Use (shelter) area or the paths in and around our Educational Garden and Natural Play Area will feature a different illustrated children's book. Interactive activities are included at the bottom of each set of storybook pages to further engage your child as you make your way through the book. StoryWalk庐 will be available during current park hours.
The StoryWalk庐 Project was created by Anne Ferguson of Montpelier, Vermont, and developed in collaboration with the Kellogg-Hubbard Library. StoryWalk庐 is a registered service mark owned by Ms. Ferguson.
Don't miss this month's StoryWalk庐 for our Longleaf Celebration: The Glorious Forest that Fire Built, written and illustrated by Ginny Neil. It follows the paved trail beginning at the traditional playground and is available from Sept. 1-30.
Adventure Backpacks

Parents and teachers, would you like to enhance your visit to the park? Our four new Adventure Backpacks contain self-guided educational activities complete with instructions, equipment, guides and take-home activities for further enrichment.
Choose from the following offerings:
- Birds of Wonder Explore the wonderful world of birds! Go birdwatching with binoculars, learn how to keep birds safe, practice your worm-hunting skills and more!
- Bug Out! Be an insect investigator! Go on a big hunt to safely catch insects, discover how to create insect habitat in your own backyard, play a game to move like different insects (Can you fly like a dragonfly? Scurry like a roach?), and make a fun craft and insect-themed snack with take-home activities!
- Exploration Learn how to be a nature detective as you explore the park! Participate in a special challenge to decipher clues as you visit different areas of the park, make your own scat and more!
- Journey to the Past Embark on a journey to the homesite of a family who lived on this land before it became a park. Play games of this bygone era, go on a scavenger hunt, try your hand at our "history mystery," and use props to play make-believe at the Womble family wash house!
Adventure Backpacks are located in a bin at the Park Office building (first right after you enter). Stop by anytime during park hours to sign one out and begin your adventure!
Virtual Public Programs
Wild Wednesday Program Series
Join us for our Virtual Wild Wednesday Program Series! Virtual public programs will be interactive, including games, stories, activities and/or live specimens with suggestions for further enrichment and an invitation to explore the outdoors. Zoom meeting links and other pertinent information provided upon registration.
*Please note that this series is on hiatus while we evaluate the demand for virtual public programs.
Other Program Opportunities
Family Programs
Designed for families to enjoy together, these programs are geared toward all ages, unless a minimum age is specified. For Family Programs, all participants must be registered online in advance.
Each family member attending must be registered in advance through our online system.
Free Family Event!
Longleaf Ramble and Wagon Tours
Saturday, Sept. 20, 10 a.m.鈥1 p.m.
Join us for a special event as we honor all things Longleaf Pine!
- Educational booths from The Longleaf Alliance, the N.C. Herpetological Society and N.C. Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation, Dragonfly Nature Programs, Jordan Lake Educational State Forest, and the N.C. Forest Service will introduce you to this unique ecosystem and its critters and explain the importance of prescribed fire.
- Sit down with the Fuquay-Varina Community Library for interactive storytimes at 10:30 a.m. and noon.
- Watch Pat Cheadle demonstrate Longleaf basket weaving and pick up a special creation (be sure to bring cash)!
- Pick up a free Longleaf seedling, courtesy of Duke Energy (while supplies last)!
- Take a photo with Smokey Bear!
- Enjoy Longleaf-themed games and crafts, a unique scavenger hunt, and take a guided wagon tour to our beautiful Longleaf Restoration Area. Pre-registration is required for the wagon tours due to limited seating (register below). As a special treat, indulge in free Howling Cow ice cream and other frozen treats (while supplies last). For more information, visit the event page.
Extend your fun by bringing a picnic lunch and spending your day at the park! It鈥檚 free for all ages! This event will take place at the Loblolly Shelter and on the open playfield.
*Registration is not required for the event itself, but is required for the wagon tours.
Critters of the Longleaf Forest
Tuesday, Sept. 23, 11 a.m.鈥搉oon
On this WCPSS teacher workday, and as part of our 2025 Longleaf Celebration, we will take a look at the animals that live in the longleaf forest! Reptiles, amphibians, mammals and birds of all kinds make their homes in the forest, and we will discover the ways they use this habitat's special features for food and shelter. See some of these animals up close with our taxidermy mounts and take home a Longleaf pinecone souvenir! For all ages. All participants (children and adults) must be registered. Meet at the Cypress Shelter.
Exploring Habitats: The Longleaf Forest
Sunday, Sept. 28, 2鈥3:30 p.m.
What if we told you there is a forest where giant squirrels patrol the underbrush, fire helps grow beautiful flowers, and trees drop pinecones as big as a child鈥檚 head? This is not a fairytale forest; this is the real-life magic of the Longleaf Forest! Join us as we explore the history and unique features of the forest that helped build our state as part of our 2025 Longleaf Celebration! Learn about the critters that call the forest home, see how fire shapes the ecosystem, and handle some of the tools our staff use to manage this special forest! For ages 5 and up. All participants (children and adults) must be registered. Meet at the Cypress Shelter.
Kids Discover Nature
This monthly series for children ages 2鈥5 with accompanying adult introduces them to the natural world through stories, hikes, crafts and games.
The adult does not register for these programs.
Kids Discover Nature: The Snail's Spell
Thursday, Oct. 2, 11 a.m.鈥搉oon
Join us for a fun-filled program of creativity and imagination! Together we will read The Snail's Spell by Joanne Ryder and pretend what it would be like if we were tiny snails living in a garden. Then, we鈥檒l explore life in our Educational Garden and create a cute craft.
Kids Discover Nature: Ox-cart Man
Thursday, Nov. 6, 11 a.m.鈥搉oon
Have you ever wondered what life was like in the 1800s and early 1900s? You鈥檙e in for a special treat today as we take a journey back in time! We鈥檒l read about life on a family farm in Ox-Cart Man by Donald Hall, beautifully illustrated by Barbara Cooney. After our story, we鈥檒l go on a special wagon ride tour of the park as we explore its natural beauty and unique history! You鈥檒l get to take a special item home with you from our journey! Meet at the Loblolly Shelter. *Please note today's program will be taking place at the Loblolly Shelter, near the playground.
Kids Discover Nature: Owl Moon
Thursday, Dec. 4, 11 a.m.鈥搉oon
What animal comes out after you have gone to bed? OWLS! Learn how to talk to the owls as we "hoot" our way through Owl Moon by Jane Yolen, a lovely story about a father who takes his daughter out for a moonlit walk in the snowy woods. We will explore the woods to look for places where owls might be hiding, play owl games, and make owls to take home.
Kids Drop-Off Programs
These programs allow older children to explore nature on a higher level and are designed for them to attend on their own, without parent participation.
Theater in the Park
Practice Session #1 鈥 Thursday, Nov. 13, 1鈥4 p.m.
Practice Session #2 鈥 Friday, Nov. 14, 1鈥4 p.m.
Performance 鈥 Saturday, Nov. 15, 1鈥3:30 p.m.
Is your child a budding actor who enjoys the outdoors? We鈥檝e got just the right opportunity for them: our Theater in the Park drop-off program! Over the course of three days, we鈥檒l practice skits and work together to create performances with an 鈥淥utdoor Adventures鈥 theme. We鈥檒l have a final production of our work on the last day for your family to enjoy! No experience necessary - just bring your energy and enthusiasm! For ages 7鈥13.
Be sure your child eats lunch before coming to the program! Dress for the weather and bring a full water bottle and hearty snack for each day. Meet at the Cypress Shelter.
Please be sure to register your child for all three days of the program! Also, register everyone in your household who will be attending Saturday鈥檚 performance.
Harris Lake ecoEXPLORERS

Interested in becoming a citizen scientist and improving your nature identification skills with park staff? We鈥檝e got the opportunity for you! Harris Lake County Park is an ecoEXPLORE HotSpot, which means it鈥檚 a place where you can make observations of plants and animals and share them with scientists! We'll be offering a quarterly opportunity to explore the park with our staff in search of a certain taxon, or group, of animals or plants. We will add our findings to the park's Natural Resources Inventory Database, which records our wildlife diversity, so we need you, citizen scientists!
Harris Lake ecoEXPLORERS
Sunday, Oct. 19, 2鈥3:30 p.m.
Our focus for this month鈥檚 program will be on mycology and ecology! Come learn about the fungi we have at the park and search for cool species! We鈥檒l also learn about relationships between organisms and their surroundings as part of ecoEXPLORE鈥檚 Ecology Mission Badge. If you are new to ecoEXPLORE, please create a profile at prior to the program. Meet at the Cypress Shelter and bring your device for taking photos and capturing data. For ages 7 and up鈥攎ust be registered with an adult. Space is limited!
Adult & Educator Workshops
Harris Lake County Park periodically offers programs and workshops for adults and older children/teens, many of which are eligible for NC Environmental Education Certification or CEU credits.
*Check back for more information!
Become a Junior Park Explorer!

Do you like to explore parks and preserves? Do you like winning prizes? Our Junior Park Explorers program is for you! Learn more here.