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Top 10 Fleurieu conservation parks
Top 10

Top 10 Fleurieu conservation parks

From clifftop wilderness to a peat swamp hiding an endangered emu-wren - the peninsula's protected places, ranked

The quiet estate

Wine gets the marketing, but the Fleurieu's conservation parks are the peninsula's real estate of substance - tens of thousands of protected hectares holding its last swamps, its mine ruins, its sea cliffs and a respectable share of its wildlife. Most charge nothing. Most are nearly empty midweek.

Our ten are ranked for visitors: variety of walking, quality of scenery, and that hard-to-fake sense of being somewhere intact. The big names like Deep Creek National Park earn their reputations, but the small parks are the sleepers - nobody's first Fleurieu trip includes a peat swamp, and several second trips should. Walkers chasing a full day should pair this list with our Heysen Trail day hikes; several of these parks carry the trail through their best sections.

  1. 1
    Deep Creek National Park
    Cape Jervis

    Deep Creek National Park

    The Fleurieu's biggest wilderness and its obvious number one: 15 trails through stringybark forest and ocean clifftops, waterfalls after rain, campgrounds, and Kangaroo Island filling the horizon. You could give it a week.

    See place →
  2. 2
    Newland Head Conservation Park
    Victor Harbor

    Newland Head Conservation Park

    Waitpinga and Parsons beaches, 70-metre cliffs and the most dramatic Fleurieu stretch of the Heysen Trail. The clifftop circuit here is the best half-day coastal walk on the peninsula.

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  3. 3
    Talisker Conservation Park
    Cape Jervis

    Talisker Conservation Park

    Bush and industrial archaeology in one: an interpretive trail winds through the stone ruins of the 1860s Talisker silver-lead mine. Eerie, photogenic and never busy.

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  4. 4
    Aldinga & Port Willunga

    Aldinga Scrub Conservation Park

    One of the last surviving pockets of the original coastal vegetation that once covered the Adelaide plains - sandy tracks, wetlands and serious birdlife twenty minutes from the wine country.

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  5. 5
    Cox Scrub Conservation Park
    Inman Valley

    Cox Scrub Conservation Park

    563 hectares of native scrub near Mount Compass and one of the Fleurieu's best birdwatching reserves. Three quiet trails; bring binoculars and patience.

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  6. 6
    McLaren Vale

    Kyeema Conservation Park

    Stringybark forest beside Kuitpo with more than 80 recorded bird species, including the beautiful firetail. Pleasingly flat walking by Fleurieu standards.

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  7. 7
    Inman Valley

    Mount Magnificent Conservation Park

    The name oversells the altitude but not the view: a 3.5 km Heysen Trail summit loop with a panorama reaching Lake Alexandrina and the Coorong.

    See place →
  8. 8
    Inman Valley

    Stipiturus Conservation Park

    The Fleurieu's largest peat swamp and a stronghold of the endangered Mount Lofty Ranges southern emu-wren - the park is literally named for the bird. A specialist's park, and proud of it.

    See place →
  9. 9
    Inman Valley

    Mount Billy Conservation Park

    High-rainfall stringybark country above Inman Valley protecting some of the peninsula's last upland swamps. Green, mossy and quiet in a way the coast never is.

    See place →
  10. 10
    Myponga & Second Valley

    Nixon-Skinner Conservation Park

    Eight hectares beside Myponga Reservoir, and a piece of history: South Australia's first privately donated nature reserve, gifted in 1956. Ten minutes of walking, one good story.

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Park notes: dogs are generally not permitted in conservation parks, fires are seasonal and regulated, and the smaller reserves have no facilities at all - which is, of course, the attraction.

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