There are 761 trails & sites in Western Australia
761 results
St John Brook Conservation Park is best known for the gently flowing St John Brook and the area’s fascinating timber milling history.
The brooding beauty of the mountain landscape, its stunning and diverse wildflowers and the challenge of climbing Bluff Knoll have long drawn bushwalkers and climbers to the Stirling Range National Park.
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.
You can enjoy great views to the west from the wooden lookout on Stony Hill, the highest point in Torndirrup National Park. The southernmost peak of the Torndirrup Peninsula can be reached via a rugged 4.3 km return path, which is steep in sections. Allow approximately 2 hours return.
Success Hill is a very important site to Whadjuk Noongars. Noongars believe the Waugal is present at the section where Bennett Brook enters the Swan River below Success Hill.
View of Australia's biggest open-cut gold mine, The Super Pit which is a massive 290m deep, 1.5km wide and 4km long. Be there for one of the daily blast times.
Surf Point has stunning coastal scenery and offers good snorkelling and diving. You can often see turtles, sharks and other large marine animals from the shore.
Boranup Beach is a powerful exposed beach break that offers left and right-handers that are suitable to all skills levels.
Cable Beach (Broome) is an exposed beach break that offers left and right-handers, perfect for beginners.
Centres is a fast and heavy left that offers a hollow and square jawed barrel. It is located out the back of Tombstones and can be accessed via the Tombstones carpark.
City Beach is a left hand beach break that breaks off the groyne and is often crowded as it can only support a small crowd of surfers. Popular location for groms.
Cottesloe is a fairly exposed beach and groyne break that is relatively consistent all year around.
Fencelines is one of the more mellow options around the Gnaraloo area and is perfect for those not quite ready to take on the gnarlier outer reefs.
Indjidup is home to three breaks - Car Parks, The Point and Pea Break, with all breaking best in a sou-east wind, although The Point can also be surfed in a sou-westerly.
Jakes Point is one of the states most famous remote surf breaks and is best ridden by the locals and experienced surfers.
Lancelin Back Beach is a popular beach break for surfers of all abilities and ages.
Lefthanders is an exposed reef break home to Ulus, Noisies, Lefties and Umbies, all of which are suited to a variety of different skill levels.
Midgies is a very unforgiving wave, offering a fast and hollow left hander, that breaks onto a sharp, jagged reef.
This right hand reef break is known to produce some of the greatest, heavy duty swells along the South West coast.
Red Bluff offers a heavy left-hander with a steep takeoff followed by a pitching lip and deep barrel. Strictly for the experienced surfer.
Redgate beach break is perfect for beginners and is often a popular site for surf schools. The break is also fully capable of producing a punchy A-frame, exciting and fun for the intermediate surfer.
Margret River River Mouth is a fantastic beach break for surfing, body boarding and body surfing, all year round.
Located at the most northern point of Eagle Bay, Rocky Point offers an average left hander perfect for intermediate and advanced surfers.
Scarborough Beach break is a popular location for beginner surfers and surf schools, with waves remaining relatively small all year round.
Located in the bay of Gracetown, South Point and Huzzas (Huzzawuiie) are both perfect for the inexperienced to intermediate surfer.
Surfers Point is an ideal place to watch some of the best Indian Ocean waves be ridden - or ride them yourself!
The Box is an intense right-hander with a thick lip that loves to hurl a surfer on to the shelf. The break certainly makes it on to the list of Australia's most dangerous waves.
You'll need 4WD to get to Three Bears along Sugar Loaf Road, but once there you'll have the choice of three breaks which will make it worth your while!
It’s known for some of the roundest, longest tubes in the world. It is a left hand, full on barrel from start to finish, depending on the tide and swell.