The palace park in Godzięcin is a vast, historic green complex covering over 15 hectares, established in the second half of the 19th century in the English style. It surrounds the former palace, now home to a care and educational facility, and is an important element of Lower Silesia's cultural heritage.
The park delights with its rich natural beauty:
- An ancient forest, approximately 200 years old, dominated by English oaks, limes, maples, beeches, and ashes.
- Exotic trees such as American tulipwood, honey locust, bald cypress, Douglas fir, common yew, and giant arborvitae.
- Natural monuments, including a small-leaved lime with a circumference of 555 cm and two oaks with circumferences of 400 and 420 cm. The park also includes:
- a fragment of the classicist family tomb of the former owners of the estate, with a coat of arms and a biblical inscription,
- a 19th-century brick garden wall,
- walking paths leading through picturesque spots, including along a pond with clumps of trees.
In spring, the park blooms with anemones, lilies of the valley, and bugles, and its fauna includes hedgehogs, squirrels, bats, numerous bird species, and butterflies, such as the swallowtail butterfly and the peacock butterfly.