
Tag: Camp Kitchen in Australia
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Stay closest to Earth’s oldest living organisms at Hamelin Pool in the Shark Bay World Heritage Area. Powered and unpowered sites, a pool, cafe, and the historic 1884 Telegraph Station. Your base for stromatolites, dolphins, and outback coastline.
The only accommodation inside the Monkey Mia Conservation Park, steps from daily wild dolphin encounters. Powered, ensuite, and unpowered camping with pools, restaurants, and a general store. Your base for exploring the Shark Bay World Heritage Area.
Beachfront camping beside historic 1870s prison ruins in Arakoon National Park, South West Rocks. Powered and unpowered sites, camp kitchen, restaurant on site, and whale watching from your campsite in winter and spring.
Camp in genuine bushland just 10km from Sydney CBD at Lane Cove National Park. Powered and unpowered sites, cabins, swimming pool, camp kitchen, and a 10-minute walk to the train station. Lorikeets and possums included.
The only campground inside Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park. Over 300 bush campsites beneath river red gums, with resort pool access, scenic flights, Adnyamathanha cultural tours and emus wandering your campsite. Best April to October.
Camp beside Litchfield’s iconic Wangi Falls with monsoon-fed swimming, hot showers, and thousands of fruit bats at dusk. One of the Territory’s best family campgrounds, set deep in tropical rainforest with 33 sites and solid facilities.
Camp behind Australia’s whitest sand beach at Lucky Bay, where kangaroos lounge on the shore and turquoise water stretches to the horizon. 56 sites in Cape Le Grand National Park, fully self-sufficient, completely unforgettable.
Historic outback resort bordering Elsey National Park with 34 degree thermal pools just 100m from your campsite. Over 160 powered sites, no bookings needed. Restaurant, bar, live entertainment, and barramundi fishing on the Roper River. Powered from $40/night.
Million-acre Gulf Country wilderness station with thermal springs, 4WD tracks, fishing and ocean frontage. Currently closed to independent visitors, accessible only via registered tour groups. Contact the station for latest access details and tour operator bookings.
The “Disneyland” of the Kimberley. A massive station offering powered camping, a steakhouse, bar, and fuel. Accessible via a graded dirt road (high clearance recommended). Warning: Zebedee Springs closes at noon, and you must pay a separate Wilderness Permit fee…






