Consultation packs and submission forms will be available on the walk with submissions needing to be returned to Masterton District Council by 4pm on January 31.
A tree audit that formed part of a Landscape Rejuvenation Project last year has identified several trees - mostly around the park lake edge - that could be felled and replaced with other species.
These include several red oaks, an ash, an elm and a yellow bark willow that could be replaced with pin oaks.
One of the red oaks is opposite the carpark exit and others adjacent to picnic tables or near the water's edge.
The red oaks are acknowledged in the audit as having "high landscape and historic heritage values".
Apart from a proposal to fell them each has also had a suggested maintenance assessment that people on the walk will be able to consider.
The red oak near the car park exit is said to be suffering from "considerable dieback within the upper crown" and rapidly becoming hazardous to vehicles and pedestrians.
Of the other oaks one has bark lifting away from the trunk below old pruning wood, revealing extensive decay of the sapwood and is said to have no more than a "short life expectancy."
The ash tree, west of the carpark exit, has trunk damage and "minor crown failure" and the elm is said to be "looking somewhat battered" and to be no longer a "suitable specimen to have in a high use area."
According to the audit the yellow bark willow is not a high-quality tree.
It is damaged and misshapen and in any circumstance would need to be replaced within five years.
Several common oaks and conifers have also been inspected and will be subject either to specified maintenance or alternatively to being felled.