Grampians National Park
Good to know
- Best time to go
- August to October for wildflowers; year-round for rock art sites
- Budget
- $
- Accessibility
- limited
- Coordinates
- Open in maps
The Grampians, known to Djab wurrung and Jardwadjali peoples as Gariwerd, rise from the flat western Victorian plains as a series of east-facing sandstone ridges reaching 1,167 metres at Mount William. The national park protects Victoria's richest Aboriginal rock art sites, including stencils and animal paintings at Bunjil's Shelter and Ngamadjidj. The Pinnacle and Boroka Lookout are the most frequented viewpoints, providing panoramas of the Wimmera plains with springtime wildflower displays on the slopes below.
Where next?
