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Visitors can access the Goldfields Woodlands Conservation Park via the southern entry point using the Holland Track.
Kalgoorlie Arboretum boasts a wide variety of native wildflowers, walk trails for all ages, picnic tables under the shade of river gums and a small dam that attracts waterbirds.
The Karlkurla Bushland Park comprises of 200 hectares of natural regrowth bushland, along with over 2,000 trees and shrubs planted by community volunteers back in 2000.
The third largest monolith in Australiais recognized as an interesting and unspoilt location for flora and fauna study.
Popular picnicking place for local people especially during spring when it abounds with wildflowers.
A popular family campsite in a protected cove which is safe for swimming and snorkelling.
Interesting ruins of an 1870s homestead just a short distance from the shores of Stokes Inlet.
Rising 715m above the surrounding alluvial plain, Mount Augustus is an inselberg, meaning ‘island mountain’. There are rocky creeks, gorges and open plains supporting a variety of vegetation and wildlife.
No Tree Hill is a popular walk during the wildflower season that offers views across the Phillips River valley to the Eyre Range.
Located 175km west of Kalgoorlie, this area is has a goldmine of history, plants and animals.
Nuytsland Nature Reserve contains the 190km long and 80m high Baxter Cliffs - one of Australia's great scenic features and possibly the longest unbroken cliffs in the world.
The Aboriginal heritage of Dryandra is revealed along the Ochre Trail. Interpretive signs along the way explain aspects of Nyoongar culture, including an ochre pit.
Peak Charles, an ancient granite peak and its companion, Peak Eleanora, give sweeping views over the dry sandplain heaths and salt lake systems of the surrounding countryside.
A remote outpost where the isolation and spirit of our south coast pioneers can be readily felt and contemplated.
Quoin Head in the Fitzgerald River National Park is a wonderful place to experience some of the most rugged and spectacular coastal scenery the park has to offer.
Rowles Lagoon is a scenic camping spot and haven for waterbirds in the arid Goldfields Region.
A complex mosaic of exposed granite rock, with surrounding shrublands and woodlands.
Seal Creek is a popular camping and fishing spot on this wild and scenic section of the south coast.
The mouth of Stokes Estuary in the middle of Dunster Castle Bay can be reached via a 3.5 km walk trail when water levels allow.
An information bay with parking for three vehicles, information signs under shelter and self registration facilities for day entry.
Two large camp kitchens with running water for washing up (not suitable for drinking). You can launch canoes or small dinghies from the boat ramp.
Featuring one of the most picturesque estuaries along WA’s southern coast, Stokes Inlet National Park is a great place for fishing, camping, bushwalking and birdwatching.
Home to more species of waterbird than any other wetland in south western Australia.
A small estuary that breaks out to the sea each year. Torradup Inlet is a popular recreational area for canoeing/kayaking, swimming, fishing and bird watching and is protected by the winds.
Twertup is located within the north-west sector of the Fitzgerald River National Park about 50 km south east of Jerramungup. Overlooking a wide valley, the site includes an old spongolite quarry, a Field Studies Centre and a number of walk trails.
Twilight Cove is a spectacular coastal location at the eastern end of the Baxter Cliffs.
West Beach is a scenic beach set in a small bay, with opportunities to explore water-washed rock formations and enjoy fishing or whale watching.
Whalebone Beach is a remote, scenic beach sometimes used for fishing.
Home to 250 species of flowering plants, 17 of which are found only in these hills.
Woody Island is a unique nature reserve and the only island in the Recherche Archipelago with visitor facilities.