Bookings & Enquiries Ph. 03 6231 3844
or 1300 1 CAUSE
Visitor Guide To Tasmanian National
Parks
Tasmania boasts 17 of the best National Parks in Australia.
Visit all 17 with a single vehicle pass (unlimited passengers).
Ben
Lomond
An alpine park providing downhill skiing in season.
The magnificent mountain of Ben
Lomond with its imposing and precipitous cliffs is
visible over much of the northern midlands of Tasmania.
The plateau is roughly 14 kilometres in length, 6
kilometres wide and is in excess of 1300 metres in
height. A summit on the plateau named Legges Tor is the
second highest point in Tasmania (1572 metres).
Ben Lomond is the main focus of
downhill skiing in Tasmania. The skifield on Ben Lomond
is Tasmania's only downhill skiing area which offers
some of the facilities expected of a contemporary
skifield. For the latest snow reports during the ski
season, see www.ski.com.au/reports/benlomond.
The Ben Lomond National Park is
invaluable for the conservation of the flora communities
and species diversity of Tasmania's alpine areas. The
area consists of an outstanding variety of glacial and
periglacial features which are considered of national
significance.
Cradle
Mountain
Tasmania's most visited national park offers a variety of wilderness experiences.
Cradle Mountain forms the northern
end of the wild Cradle Mt - Lake St Clair National Park,
itself a part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage
Area. The jagged contours of Cradle Mountain epitomise
the feel of a wild landscape, while ancient rainforest
and alpine heathlands, buttongrass and stands of
colourful deciduous beech provide a range of
environments to explore. Icy streams cascading out of
rugged mountains, stands of ancient pines mirrored in
the still waters of glacial lakes and a wealth of
wildlife ensure there is always something to captivate
you. The area is one of the most popular natural areas
in Tasmania. A visit will reveal why.
Cradle is the starting point for
the world-famous Overland Track, a magnificent 6 day
walk that will take you through the heart of some of the
finest mountain terrain.
The Cradle Mountain - Lake St
Clair National Park shares a "Twin Parks" agreement with
the World Heritage listed Jiuzhaigou Nature Reserve in
the People's Republic of China.
Douglas-Apsley
One of the few largely uncleared dry sclerophyll forests in Tasmania.
From its deep river gorges and
waterfalls to its dolerite capped plateau; from dry
eucalypt forest and colourful heathlands to pockets of
rainforest, Douglas-Apsley National Park is a place of
surprising contrasts. This park is one of the few that
conserve the diverse wealth of dry sclerophyll forest
plants found on the east coast of Tasmania. The crystal
clear waters that run through the park are a welcome
sight on a hot summer's day.
Whether you want a quick picnic
by a tranquil stream, a rugged walk through forest and
gorge, or a place to study rare plants and animals,
Douglas-Apsley can provide it for you.
Freycinet
Offering some of the most spectacular scenery on Tasmania's east coast.
Jutting out into the sea on
Tasmania's mild east coast is the rugged and beautiful
Freycinet Peninsula.
Freycinet National Park
consists of knuckles of granite mountains all but
surrounded by azure bays and white sand beaches. The
dramatic peaks of the Hazards welcome you as you enter
the park.
Freycinet National Park offers
a wide variety of activities. Take a walk to the pass
overlooking the perfectly shaped Wineglass Bay or try
less strenuous activities like beach strolls, swimming
or wildlife spotting.
Hartz
Mountains
Close to Hobart, a park with superb mountain landscapes.
Hartz Mountains National Park is a
window into the south-west wilderness, offering views of
remote mountain ranges as far as the southern coast. As
well as spectacular views of a landscape which has been
shaped by glaciers during past ice ages, the park offers
a variety of unique features. Waterfalls tumble off the
dolerite range that runs through the centre of the park
and small glacial lakes dot the plateau. The park
contains a wide variety of vegetation from wet eucalypt
forest and rainforest through to alpine heath on the
exposed mountain tops.
The park was included in
Tasmania's Wilderness World Heritage Area in 1989, in
recognition of its spectacular natural and cultural
values.
Take your time and enjoy short
strolls out to the glacial lakes in the area, or try the
more challenging walks up to the range top. Its highest
point, Hartz Peak (1255 m), provides panoramic views
into the heart of the southwest.
Kent
Group
Tasmania's newest national park, the Kent Group of Islands is as beautiful as
it is remote.
The six islands and islets of the
Kent Group comprise Tasmania's northernmost national
park - located about 55 kilometres north-west of
Flinders Island and approximately the same distance from
Wilsons Promontory in Victoria.
The Kent Group National Park
consists of three main Islands, Deal, Erith and Dover.
The total land area of the park is 2,374 hectares, while
the largest of the islands - Deal - has an area of 1,576
hectares.
The islands and islets have a
rich Aboriginal cultural heritage with human occupation
of the area estimated to date back between 8,000 and
13,000 years. The islands also have a long European
history. The first European to see the islands was
Mathew Flinders in 1798, during a voyage to Preservation
Island to rescue survivors of the Sydney Cove Wreck.
The islands were used for
extensive fur seal sealing, for a period of about 50
years. A lighthouse station was built on Deal Island in
1848. The island has not had permanent inhabitants since
1992 when the lighthouse was deactivated, although
volunteer caretakers have since lived on the island.
Lake
St Clair
Offers a wealth of walking opportunities.
Lake St Clair is at the southern
end of the world famous Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair
National Park and is part of the Tasmanian Wilderness
World Heritage Area.
Carved out by ice during
several glaciations over the last two million years,
this is the deepest lake in Australia and the headwaters
of the Derwent River, upon which the capital city of
Tasmania is located.
The area around Lake St Clair
offers a wealth of walks, ranging from leisurely strolls
to overnight bushwalks, as well as beautiful forests to
explore. Lake St Clair is also the end point of the
famous Overland Track, a long-distance walk which runs
from Cradle Mountain in the north to Cynthia Bay on the
southern shore of Lake St Clair.
The Cradle Mountain - Lake St
Clair National Park shares a "Twin Parks" agreement with
the World Heritage listed Jiuzhaigou Nature Reserve in
the People's Republic of China.
Maria
Island
Accessible by ferry, this park offers history, walks and abundant wildlife.
Maria
Island is a special place with something for everyone -
historic ruins, sweeping bays, rugged cliffs and
mountains, and remarkable wildlife.
Set just off the warm east
coast, the island is easily accessed by ferry. Once on
the island you will discover a place where there are no
motor vehicles, no shops and no worries. Whether you're
here for hours or days you can choose the kind of stay
that suits you and let Maria work its spell on you.
Further details of the rich
history of Maria Island are available at our Visitor's
Guide to Tasmania's Historic Places.
Mole
Creek Karst
Discover the caves at Mole Creek.
The Mole Creek Karst National Park
was declared in 1996 to provide protection for some of
the finest and most visited cave systems in the State,
including Marakoopa and King Solomons Cave. Both caves
are open to the public, and provide the opportunity to
take a deeper look into the fascinating world of 'karst'
landscapes.
The Mole Creek area is renowned
for its caves. Marakoopa and King Solomons Caves are but
two caves in an area that contains over 300 known caves
and sinkholes. Other typical karst features in this area
include gorges and large underground streams and
springs.
Both caves are home to a range
of fascinating animals which have evolved features which
allow them to adapt to their lightless environments. The
glow-worm display in Marakoopa Cave is the largest
you'll see in any public access cave anywhere in
Australia. For the visitor, the Mole Creek Karst
National Park offers a range of activities. Although
guided tours of the caves will be high on your agenda,
don't miss the opportunity to take a short walk through
the beautiful forests in which these caves occur.
Mt
Field
Tasmania's first nature reserve was created here in 1885.
Mt Field National Park is one of
Tasmania's most loved national parks. The park has a
wide variety of scenic features and wildlife and offers
a great range of facilities for day visitors. Few other
national parks in Australia offer such a diversity in
vegetation, ranging from tall swamp gum forests and
massive tree ferns at the base of the mountain, through
rainforest along the Lake Dobson Road, to alpine
vegetation at the higher elevations.
The park essentially has two
visitor sections. The first, near the park entrance,
includes picnic facilities and the famous Russell Falls.
Stunning walks through enormous fern forests and some of
the tallest trees in the world are available in this
area.
The second visitor section is
centred at Lake Dobson and includes the long day walks
and skiing areas. For the latest snow reports during the
ski season. Dramatic mountain scenery and alpine plant
communities are a feature of the higher parts of the
park.
Mt
William
Renowned for its long lonely beaches, teeming wildlife and abundant plant life.
From its long, lonely beaches to
its teeming wildlife; from its unique history to its
abundant plant life, Mt William National Park is a place
of constant fascination. Nestled in the far north-east
corner of the State, the park is an important area for
the conservation of Tasmania's coastal heathlands and
dry sclerophyll plants.
Whether you fish or swim; watch
birds or wander by the sea, there's always something
more to see in this beautiful national park.
Narawntapu
(formerly Asbestos Range)
Discover the peaceful scenery of Narawntapu National Park.
Narawntapu National Park (formerly
known as Asbestos Range National Park) is a place of
peace for people and wildlife alike. It stretches from
the low coastal ranges to the long Bass Strait beaches,
and includes an historic farm, a complex of inlets,
small islands, headlands, wetlands, dunes and lagoons,
all with an amazing variety of plants and animals.
Small quantities of asbestos,
among other minerals, were once mined in areas beyond
the Asbestos Range, but never actually in the Asbestos
Range itself - despite the earlier name of the park.
Hence the name change.
Dubbed the "Serengeti of
Tasmania", Narawntapu is one of the best places in
Tasmania to view wildlife. The park boasts a rich array
of easily observed animals that come out in the evening
to graze on the grasslands. Some of the animals that you
may see include the Forester kangaroo, Bennetts wallaby
and common wombat. You may even catch a glimpse of a
Tasmanian devil.
Whether you're here for water
activities or wildlife; bushwalking or beachcombing;
picnicking or camping, you'll find Narawntapu a special
place.
Rocky
Cape
A park rich with history - Aboriginal heritage, shipwrecks and more.
Rocky Cape National Park is full
of surprises. You may only want to make a quick visit to
the Rocky Cape lighthouse with its sweeping views, but
there is much more to see if you take the time.
Before you know it you're
finding out there's more to this park than meets the
eye. Aboriginal heritage, ship wrecks, rock formations
turned sideways, beautiful hills running down to the sea
and an incredible variety of flowering plants. It makes
the many corners of this small park worth closer
inspection.
Savage River
A remote wilderness park in Australia's largest area of cool temperate rainforest.
Savage River National Park is a
wilderness region in the north west of Tasmania. The
park protects the largest contiguous area of cool
temperate rainforest surviving in Australia and acts as
a refuge for a rich primitive flora, undisturbed river
catchments, high quality wilderness, old growth forests,
geo-diversity and natural landscape values.
The western portion of the park
includes the most extensive basalt plateau in Tasmania
that still retains a wholly intact forest ecosystem. The
upper Savage River, which lends the park its name, runs
through a pristine, rain forested river gorge system.
The park contains habitat for a diverse rainforest fauna
and is a stronghold for a number of vertebrate species
which have suffered population declines elsewhere in
Tasmania and mainland Australia.
The parks remoteness from human
settlement and mechanised access, its undisturbed
hinterland rivers and extensive
rainforest, pristine blanket bog peat soils and
isolated, elevated buttongrass moorlands ensure the
wilderness character of the park. Like the vast World
Heritage listed Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area
to its south, the area is one of the few remaining
temperate wilderness areas left on Earth.
Unlike other national parks,
Savage River National Park remains inaccessible. In
keeping with its wilderness character, there are no
facilities and no roads or mechanised access to the
park. However, the park is surrounded by the Savage
River Regional Reserve, in which a number of rough 4WD
tracks provide limited access. To the north of the
reserve, a number of State Forest Reserves can be
accessed by standard vehicles. They offer an insight
into the magnificent rainforest ecosystem that lies to
the southeast within the Savage River National Park.
South
Bruny
Situated at the southern tip of Bruny Island.
South Bruny National Park lies at
the southern tip of Bruny Island off the southeast coast
of Tasmania. The park encompasses all of the coastline
and some of the hinterland between Fluted Cape and the
southern part of Great Taylors Bay.
South Bruny National Park was
gazetted in 1997 mainly for its wonderful coastal
scenery. Much of the coast is comprised of towering
cliffs, muttonbird rookeries, gardens of kelp seaweed
and long sandy beaches. In some areas the park extends
several kilometres back from the coastline, where lush
rainforest may be found containing several endemic plant
species (plants unique to Tasmania). The popularity of
South Bruny National Park as a tourist destination is
enhanced by its abundant birdlife, coastal heathland and
its prominent place in the history of Tasmania.
The park offers plenty of
opportunities for walking, from the short stroll to the
remains of an old whaling station at Grass Point, to the
more demanding Labillardiere Peninsula circuit.
Adventure Bay and Jetty Beach
provide safe, sheltered areas for swimming, while Cloudy
Bay is a popular spot for experienced surfers.
Southwest
The wild, inspiring country of this park is part of the Tasmanian Wilderness
World Heritage Area.
The magnificent Southwest National
Park encompasses over six hundred thousand hectares of
wild, inspiring country and forms part of the Tasmanian
Wilderness World Heritage Area.
The park, the largest in
Tasmania, epitomises the granduer and spirit of
wilderness in its truest sense. Much of the park is
remote and far removed from the hustle and bustle of the
modern world. For many, just the fact that such a place
still exists brings solace. For others, the region
offers the challenge to explore areas that retain the
same wildness that once characterised new frontiers. For
yet others, the area offers the chance to view
magnificent scenery from the comfort of their car.
The Gordon River and Scotts
Peak roads wind through forest, scrub and moorland,
sometimes opening out onto breathtaking views of rugged
mountains like the Saw Back, Anne, Western Arthur and
Frankland ranges. This is wilderness at its best, and it
is equally accessible to those who enjoy the comfort of
driving as it is to those who wish to walk in some of
the most spectacular country in Australia.
In the southeast, the park is
accessible from Cockle Creek - the most southerly point
able to be reached by road in Australia. From Cockle
Creek, the magnificent south coast is able to be reached
along a walking track. From the coast, the South Coast
Track continues to Melaleuca, a 7 day walk along some of
the wildest coastline in Australia.
Melaleuca itself is accessible
by air or boat only. Here, in the far southwest of
Tasmania, lies the spectacular Port Davey and Bathurst
Harbour.
Strzelecki
This park protects endemic and rare flora and fauna on Flinders Island.
Strzelecki National Park covers
4216 hectares in the south-western corner of Flinders
Island. Flinders is the main island in the Furneaux
Group, a group of 54 islands in Bass Strait off the
north-east coast of mainland Tasmania.
The national park protects rich
and varied ecosystems as well as spectacular coastal and
granite mountain landscapes. Strzelecki forms an area
where plant and animal species found on mainland
Australia and Tasmania overlap, making the park of
important biogeographic significance. The park is also
home to a high number of endemic species, rare flora and
fauna and significant vegetation communities.
The park was proclaimed in 1967
and given the official name of Strzelecki National Park
in 1972, in honour of the Polish scientist and explorer
Count Paul Edmund Strzelecki, who climbed a number of
the mountain peaks on Flinders Island in 1842.
Tasman
Situated on Tasmania's spectacular Tasman Peninsula, this park offers superb
coastal scenery.
Tasman National Park protects
diverse forest and spectacular coastline from Cape
Surville to Waterfall Bay and Fortescue Bay; and from
Cape Hauy to Cape Pillar and Cape Raoul. The park
incorporates several off-shore islands, including Fossil
Island, Hippolyte Rocks and Tasman Island.
It is an area of great beauty
and natural diversity, including some of the most
stunning coastal scenery anywhere in Australia. Not
suprisingly, the park offers some of the best coastal
walks in the country. Many interesting rock formations
can be found along the coastline, while the southern end
of the park has some of the highest and most spectacular
sea cliffs in Australia. The park is also home to a wide
range of land and marine animals, and several species of
rare plant.
The Tasman National Park was
proclaimed under the Regional Forest Agreement (RFA) in
April 1999. The RFA identified the area for reservation
for a number of reasons, including its high conservation
and scenic values.
Walls
of Jerusalem
The picturesque park is part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area.
The Walls of
Jerusalem National Park forms a part of the Tasmanian
Wilderness World Heritage Area. As the park is remote
and not accessible via road, the Walls retains its
wilderness character. There are no facilities for casual
visitors, while bushwalkers are required to be
well-equipped and experienced in the often harsh
Tasmanian conditions. As with all natural areas, it is
important that bushwalkers follow minimal impact
guidelines. See our "Essential Bushwalking Guide and
Trip Planner".
The region is an alpine
wilderness dominated by dolerite peaks and alpine
vegetation. The Walls of Jerusalem National Park is very
exposed to the extremes of Tasmania's changeable
weather.
Wild
Rivers
A region of dramatic mountain peaks, beautiful rainforest, deep river valleys
and spectacular gorges.
The Franklin - Gordon Wild Rivers
National Park lies in the heart of the Tasmanian
Wilderness World Heritage Area. It is a region of
dramatic mountain peaks, beautiful rainforest, deep
river valleys and spectacular gorges. The park is famous
for the wild and pristine rivers that twist their way
through the wilderness. The Franklin River itself has
become synonymous with Australia's largest conservation
battle - the battle to save the Franklin from a proposed
hydro-electric power scheme which would have flooded the
river.
The Lyell Highway winds for 56
kilometres through the heart of the Franklin - Gordon
Wild Rivers National Park. Take your time to enjoy the
drive through the park. Along the Lyell Highway there
are several short walks and picnic stops along the way
that will allow you to discover the grandeur and beauty
of the Wild Rivers region.
The park can also be visited by
cruise boats which operate out of the west coast village
of Strahan.
(The information on this page has been provided
by Department of Primary Industries, Water & Environment from http://www.dpiwe.tas.gov.au)