
Yanchep: Treetops Adventure
Treetops Adventure Yanchep
FromA$69
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Your guide to Yanchep
About forty kilometres north of Perth, Yanchep sits where the coastal limestone plain meets the Indian Ocean shoreline, a stretch of Western Australia that feels genuinely unhurried in a way that the metropolitan fringe rarely manages. The town takes its name from a Noongar word, and the country here carries that deep Indigenous connection to land and water that characterises much of the south-west of the continent. Yanchep National Park, the area's centrepiece, was gazetted in 1935 and protects a landscape of tuart and banksia woodland, limestone caves, and a lake system that draws black swans in numbers that have made the bird almost synonymous with the place.
The national park is where most visitors orient themselves first, and reasonably so. The caves beneath the park, formed over millennia by slightly acidic groundwater dissolving the Tamala limestone, are among the more accessible cave systems in Western Australia, and the woodland walking trails offer a reliable chance of spotting western grey kangaroos, which have become accustomed enough to the park's quieter corners that encounters feel unhurried rather than incidental. The heritage-listed Yanchep Inn, built in the 1930s, anchors the park's social geography and gives the whole area a sense of continuity with its early twentieth-century origins as a leisure destination for Perth families.
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