Visit Albany
Albany is a world-class hiker's paradise - with its stunning coastline, pristine nature reserves and proximity to one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world.Â
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The Sharp Point Walk Trail is a short 250m loop trail in Torndirrup National Park providing awe-inspiring coastal views out to The Gap and Peak Head in the south-east and out to the Albany Wind Farm in the south-west.
Torndirrup National Park, windswept coastal heaths give way to massive granite outcrops, sheer cliffs and steep, sandy slopes and dunes. In late spring, the wildflowers are stunning.
There are a number of stunning lookouts and walk trails in the park, including Sharp Point and whales are frequently seen from the cliffs, particularly during winter.
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Located just south of Albany, Torndirrup National Park features a diverse mix of ecosystems. Its rugged, wind-swept coastal heathland and sheltered gullies are home to an array of unique flora inlcuding spectacular spring flowers and rare endemic shrubs - as well as endangered mammals and rich birdlife.
The park’s vegetation changes dramatically from the exposed coastal cliffs to the sheltered inland valleys. Flora in these areas include hardy, salt-resistant, and low-growing plants, including native rosemary, banjine, and thick-leafed fanflower. In the woodland forests there are peppermint trees, swamp yate and jarrah, and shrubs inlcuding the rare Albany woolly-bush. From spring to early summer, the park bursts with color. Keep an eye out for the red and green kangaroo paws, delicate running postmen, and hidden spider or sun orchids. The area is also home to critically endangered flora, like the blue tinsel lily.
Because of the varied terrain, the park supports a dense network of marsupials, birds, and marine life. Along with western grey kangaroos, quendas and the tiny honey possum, the park is also home to the endangered western ringtail possum. Honeyeaters and wattlebirds flit through the heath, while birds of prey (like kestrels, whistling kites, and black-shouldered kites) ride the coastal air currents. You may also spot red-eared firetail finches, western rosellas, and seabirds like petrels. Reptiles like dugites, tiger snakes, bardicks, and bobtail lizards can be found in the rocky crevices and heath. The coastal viewing platforms (such as the ones near the Albany Wind Farm) are excellent vantage points for spotting migrating southern right and humpback whales.
Torndirrup Peninsula is one of the Great Southern’s most spectacular coastal landscapes. Its ancient rocks formed along a southern continental margin that was once connected to Antarctica as part of the supercontinent Gondwana.
The area lies within the Albany-Fraser Orogen, a vast belt of ancient rocks formed around 1,200 to 1,400 million years ago, when continental plates collided along the southern margin of Australia.
The peninsula is dominated by granite and gneiss, extremely hard igneous and metamorphic rocks that formed deep within the Earth’s crust under intense heat and pressure. These ancient rocks were later exposed as erosion gradually stripped away softer overlying layers.
Today, rainfall, wind and powerful ocean swells continually batter this coastline, exploiting fractures and weaknesses in the granite and gneiss. Over time, this erosion has carved some of the park’s most famous geological features, including The Gap, Natural Bridge and the Blowholes.
Here is everything you need to know before visiting this trail.
Up to half an hour
250 metre loop
Road 2WD
End of Eclipse Island Road in Torndirrup National Park, 10km from Albany which is 428 km (4 hours 43 min) SE of Pert
Class 2
Easy trail with modified or hardened surface, and gentle hills or occasional steps. Clear directional signage. No bushwalking experience required. May be suitable for assisted wheelchair users (if ramps are provided at steps).
Group B - Hiking & Long Distance Trails (Bushwalks and/or longer trails)
15°C
Feels like 14°C
Max 15°C
Min 7°C
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