Wildlife & Nature
Whales, Penguins & More
The best wildlife & nature in Fleurieu Peninsula
From southern right whales calving in Encounter Bay to the little penguins of Granite Island and the leafy sea dragons of Rapid Bay, the Fleurieu is one of Australia's richest wildlife destinations.
The Fleurieu Peninsula is one of the best places in South Australia to get close to wildlife in the wild. Each year between roughly May and October, southern right whales travel to the sheltered waters of Encounter Bay off Victor Harbor to calve - you can often spot them from clifftop lookouts at the Bluff and Granite Island without ever leaving land.
Beyond the whales, the peninsula's natural diversity is remarkable for its size. The Coorong, at the southern edge near Goolwa, is an internationally significant wetland alive with pelicans, black swans and tens of thousands of migratory shorebirds. Deep Creek and the southern conservation parks shelter kangaroos, echidnas and a rich birdlife, while little penguins, New Zealand fur seals and bottlenose dolphins patrol the granite islands and reefs of the coast.
Spring carpets the bushland reserves in native wildflowers and orchids, and the rock pools of Aldinga Reef and the western beaches reveal their own miniature worlds at low tide. Whether you're whale watching, birdwatching or simply walking quietly through the bush, the Fleurieu rewards anyone who slows down and looks closely.
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Aldinga Reef Aquatic Reserve
One of South Australia's most accessible snorkelling reefs
A protected limestone reef system off Aldinga Beach and Port Willunga, fully protected since 1971 and home to wobbegongs, blue devils, schools of reef fish and dolphins.
Basham Beach
A quiet, family-friendly stretch of sand just east of Middleton, part of the Basham Beach Regional Park, with a clifftop walking trail and good rock pools.
Bristow Smith Reserve
A riverside nature playground with a wooden boat
Goolwa's premier riverside park features an award-winning nature playspace built around a 10-metre restored wooden fishing boat, right on the Murray River with BBQs, shelters and a shallow swimming beach.
CABN McLaren Vale
$$$Off-grid luxury cabins among the vines
A cluster of eight off-grid, architecturally designed tiny cabins scattered across vineyards around McLaren Flat - including CABN X cabins with private saunas and outdoor baths.
Cox Scrub Conservation Park
A 563-hectare bushland park near Mount Compass with three quiet walking trails through native scrub - one of the best birdwatching reserves on the Fleurieu.
Deep Creek National Park
Fleurieu Peninsula's biggest wilderness park
The largest conservation area on the Fleurieu Peninsula, with 15 walking trails through eucalypt forest, waterfalls, ocean clifftops and views to Kangaroo Island.
Freeman Lookout and Obelisk
Whaler's lookout with the best view of Horseshoe Bay
At the end of The Strand, the restored Freeman Lookout perches above Horseshoe Bay on a headland that whalers used as a spotting post in the 1830s. One of the Fleurieu's best whale-watching vantage points in winter.
Glacier Rock (Selwyn Rock)
A 280-million-year-old glaciated river bed
A Permian-era glacial pavement carved into 510 million year old bedrock on the floor of the Inman River - one of the oldest and most accessible glacial sites in Australia.
Goolwa Barrage
Walk the wall where the Murray meets the sea
A 630-metre concrete barrage built in 1940 to keep salt water out of the Lower Lakes, the Goolwa Barrage is a favourite wildlife spot where fur seals, pelicans and cormorants gather and visitors can walk right out over the lock gates.
Harbourmasters Walking Trail
An easy coastal loop past every Port Elliot bay
A 1.9-kilometre sealed loop trail along the granite cliffs of Port Elliot, linking Horseshoe Bay, Freeman Lookout, Green Bay and Knights Beach with sweeping Encounter Bay views.
Hindmarsh Falls
A 20-metre cascade in the hills above Victor Harbor
A short, easy walk leads to a lookout over a roughly 20-metre cascade on the Hindmarsh River, tucked into a quiet recreation reserve north of Victor Harbor.
Hindmarsh Island
Goolwa's Murray island with a controversial bridge
A large inland river island in the lower Murray near Goolwa, connected to the mainland by the 2001 Hindmarsh Island Bridge - a gateway to the Coorong and Murray Mouth.
Ingalalla Falls
Tiered cascade and rockpools in Second Valley Forest
A family-friendly tiered waterfall and rockpool just a short stroll from the carpark, set in the lush Second Valley Forest Reserve south of Normanville.
Kings Beach
A hidden beach at the foot of the Waitpinga Cliffs
A small, hidden beach framed by dramatic sandstone cliffs in Newland Head Conservation Park - reached by a short walking track from the carpark.
Kleinigs Hill Lookout
A clifftop lookout above Victor Harbor offering one of the best elevated views over Encounter Bay, Granite Island and the western coastline.
Mount Billy Conservation Park
A high-rainfall conservation park in the Inman Valley protecting some of the last Fleurieu Peninsula swamps and a network of bushwalking tracks through tall stringybark forest.
Myponga Reservoir Reserve
Walking, kayaking and fishing at a SA Water reservoir
A 250-hectare SA Water reservoir opened to the public for walking, kayaking, fishing and picnics, with a spectacular lookout over the dam wall and spillway.
Naiko at the Bluff
$$$$Architect-designed villa at Encounter Bay
A luxury family villa at 28 Jagger Road, Encounter Bay - designed by Max Pritchard Gunner Architects on a working sheep and cropping farm near The Bluff.
Newland Head Conservation Park
A coastal reserve south-west of Victor Harbor protecting Waitpinga Beach, Parsons Beach and the spectacular cliffs of the Wild South Coast Way - the Heysen Trail's most dramatic Fleurieu section.
O'Sullivan Beach
A quiet, rocky cove and boat ramp between Christies and Hallett Cove - the last of the metropolitan beaches before you enter the Fleurieu proper.
Old Willunga Hill
The Tour Down Under's most famous climb
The 3-kilometre winding ascent out of Willunga onto the Willunga Scarp is South Australia's most famous cycling climb, with panoramic Gulf views from the top.
Onkaparinga River National Park
A dramatic gorge just 35km south of Adelaide
A stunning river gorge and surrounding bushland just 35km south of Adelaide, with clifftop lookouts, riverside walks and rock pools teeming with wildlife.
Parsons Beach
Wild, remote surf beach at Newland Head
A wild, remote surf beach at the western end of Newland Head Conservation Park, best known for its powerful reef break and its seclusion.
Pear Tree Hollow
$$$Settler cottage and bell tents in Inman Valley
An early settler homestead turned boutique accommodation on Nosworthy Road: a romantic cottage, a glamping bell tent and a simple forest tent - all for couples.
Wildlife & Nature in Fleurieu Peninsula - frequently asked questions
What wildlife is the Fleurieu Peninsula known for?
The Fleurieu is best known for the southern right whales that come into Encounter Bay off Victor Harbor each winter to calve, the little penguins of Granite Island, and the leafy sea dragons that live under the Rapid Bay jetty. Inland, Deep Creek National Park is home to western grey kangaroos, short-beaked echidnas and around 100 bird species, while Seal Island in Encounter Bay supports fur seals, sea lions and bottlenose dolphins.
When is the best time to see whales on the Fleurieu Peninsula?
Southern right whales travel to the sheltered waters of Encounter Bay roughly between May and October, with the peak months usually July and August. You can often spot them for free from clifftop lookouts such as the Bluff and from Granite Island, and Big Duck Boat Tours runs boat trips out of the Granite Island Causeway during the season.
Can you still see penguins on Granite Island?
Granite Island once had a large little penguin colony, but numbers have fallen dramatically from well over a thousand birds in the early 2000s to only a few dozen in recent years. Sightings are no longer reliable, so the island is better visited for its walking trails, granite formations and whale watching, with the horse-drawn tram (running since 1894) and the causeway both connecting it to Victor Harbor.
Where can you see leafy sea dragons on the Fleurieu?
The Rapid Bay jetty is often called the seadragon capital of the world, with a resident population of leafy sea dragons living among the pylons beneath the newer public jetty. Experienced divers see them most easily, though snorkellers can also spot them in calm conditions by getting down near the bottom - the bay is well protected from most winds except northerlies.
Where is the best place to snorkel and see marine life on the Fleurieu Peninsula?
Aldinga Reef Aquatic Reserve, declared in 1971, is one of South Australia's oldest and most accessible marine sanctuaries, where at low tide you can walk straight onto the intertidal reef to explore rockpools or snorkel the shallower sections in calm water. The reef supports wobbegongs, blue devil fish, leatherjackets and big schools of zebrafish and old wives, while more experienced divers head out by boat to the Aldinga Drop Off.