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  • Floreat Beach
    FloreatBeach20080509_1994.JPG
  • Broome Aerial beach photographs
    WCP060515_009154.JPG
  • Smiths Beach Resort<br />
http://www.smithsbeachresort.com.au/
    SmithsBeach20100526_213.JPG
  • Couple walking with surfboards at Cottesloe Main Beach with Indiana Tearooms in the background
    Cottesloe20100329_2851.jpg
  • Sunsmart woman wearing a green hat looking over Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_1890.jpg
  • Surfer looking at the pylon at Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_3219.JPG
  • Smiths Beach, Yallingup
    SmithsBeach20100526_205.JPG
  • Camel ride on Cable Beach, Broome
    Broome20120919_8455.JPG
  • Broome Aerial beach photographs
    WCP060515_009160.JPG
  • Lucky Bay. The white beach and turquoise waters of this wide, sheltered bay are a must see and a great place to enjoy water-based activities<br />
<br />
Whilst exploring the south coast in 1802, Matthew Flinders sailed a dangerous route through the Recherche Archipelago. He named Lucky Bay when his vessel HMS Investigator took shelter here from a summer storm. While here, his botanist Robert Brown explored a diverse and largely unknown flora, discovering and naming many new species.<br />
<br />
Enjoy a walk along the beach to a lookout where a plaque celebrates this historic event.<br />
<br />
Boating and beach driving<br />
<br />
The sheltered bay is ideal for swimming, snorkelling, fishing, surfing and launching small boats. Be aware that these beaches are notoriously treacherous for vehicles and it is easy to become bogged in the most innocent looking wet or dry sand. Ask the ranger about surface conditions and tides.
    LuckyBay20140325_9159.JPG
  • Lucky Bay. The white beach and turquoise waters of this wide, sheltered bay are a must see and a great place to enjoy water-based activities<br />
<br />
Whilst exploring the south coast in 1802, Matthew Flinders sailed a dangerous route through the Recherche Archipelago. He named Lucky Bay when his vessel HMS Investigator took shelter here from a summer storm. While here, his botanist Robert Brown explored a diverse and largely unknown flora, discovering and naming many new species.<br />
<br />
Enjoy a walk along the beach to a lookout where a plaque celebrates this historic event.<br />
<br />
Boating and beach driving<br />
<br />
The sheltered bay is ideal for swimming, snorkelling, fishing, surfing and launching small boats. Be aware that these beaches are notoriously treacherous for vehicles and it is easy to become bogged in the most innocent looking wet or dry sand. Ask the ranger about surface conditions and tides.
    LuckyBay20140325_9146.JPG
  • Smiths Beach Resort<br />
http://www.smithsbeachresort.com.au/
    SmithsBeach20100526_214.JPG
  • Smiths Beach, Yallingup
    SmithsBeach20100526_199.JPG
  • The pylon at Cottesloe Main Beach with freight ships in Gage Roads in the background
    Cottesloe20100329_1864.jpg
  • Broome Aerial beach photographs
    WCP060515_009102.JPG
  • Broome Aerial beach photographs
    WCP060515_009100.JPG
  • Guy with surfboard at Cottesloe Main Beach silhouette against the sunset
    Cottesloe20100329_3212.jpg
  • Sunsmart woman wearing a green hat walking to Leighton Beach
    Leighton20100329_2048.jpg
  • Indiana Tearooms at Cottesloe Beach, Town of Cottesloe
    Cottesloe20131113_0923.jpg
  • Girl with boogie board at Leighton Beach
    Leighton20100329_2120.jpg
  • Surf lifesaving flag at Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_2029.jpg
  • Sunsmart woman wearing a green hat looking over Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_1970.jpg
  • Guy with surfboard at Cottesloe Main Beach silhouette against the sunset
    Cottesloe20100329_3214.jpg
  • Surf lifesaving flag and swimmers at Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_2046.jpg
  • Sunsmart woman wearing a green hat looking over Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_1908.jpg
  • Windy day in the dunes at Smiths Beach, Yallingup
    SmithsBeach20100526_201.jpg
  • Broome Aerial beach photographs
    WCP060515_009158.JPG
  • Broome Aerial beach photographs
    WCP060515_009156.JPG
  • Cable Beach
    Broome20110523_3052.JPG
  • Cottesloe Beach
    Acorn060113_004467.JPG
  • Couple on surfboards at Cottesloe Main Beach with Indiana Tearooms in the background
    Cottesloe20100329_2558.jpg
  • Girl with boogie board at Leighton Beach
    Leighton20100329_2096.jpg
  • Sunsmart woman wearing a green hat walking to Leighton Beach
    Leighton20100329_2060.jpg
  • Sunsmart woman wearing a green hat looking over Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_1971.jpg
  • Indiana Tea Rooms at Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_2532.JPG
  • Broome Aerial beach photographs
    WCP060515_008908.JPG
  • View over Cottesloe Main Beach to Indiana Tea Rooms
    Cottesloe20100329_2533.JPG
  • Girl with boogie board at Leighton Beach
    Leighton20100329_2126.jpg
  • Camel ride on Cable Beach, Broome
    Broome20120919_8475.JPG
  • Ash (?) house<br />
2 Edward St, North Beach<br />
Ray Jones Architect
    RayJones20110303_5136.JPG
  • Ash (?) house<br />
2 Edward St, North Beach<br />
Ray Jones Architect
    RayJones20110303_5128.JPG
  • Surf lifesaving flag and couple at Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_2452.jpg
  • Cottesloe Beach
    Acorn060113_004469.JPG
  • Bathers Beach Sunset
    Fremantle20160214_3529.JPG
  • Couple at Cottesloe Main Beach with Indiana Tearooms in the background
    Cottesloe20100329_2749.jpg
  • Cottesloe Main Beach and Indiana Tea Rooms
    Cottesloe20100329_1848.jpg
  • Couple on surfboards at Cottesloe Main Beach with Indiana Tearooms in the background
    Cottesloe20100329_2637.jpg
  • Sunsmart woman wearing a green hat looking over Cottesloe Main Beach
    Cottesloe20100329_1933.jpg
  • Cable Beach  <br />
Chris Maher, Kail Williams, Courtney Johnson
    Broome20110523_3764.JPG
  • Ash (?) house<br />
2 Edward St, North Beach<br />
Ray Jones Architect
    RayJones20110303_5133.JPG
  • Cottesloe Beach
    Acorn060113_004462.JPG
  • City Beach House, Pandora Dve - Ivan Iwanoff Architects
    Scoop050419_003440.JPG
  • Cottesloe Beach
    Acorn060113_004460.JPG
  • Bathers Beach Sunset
    Fremantle20160214_3546.JPG
  • Cable BeachRobyn Maher, Courtney Johnson
    Broome20110523_3925.JPG
  • Surfers at Scarborough Beac
    Seashells20101129_5176.JPG
  • View over Cygnet Bay Pearl Farm
    CygnetBay20120403_8336.JPG
  • Hillarys Boat Harbour and Sorrento Quay
    Hillarys20100307_2528.jpg
  • Rottnest Island lighthouse
    RK20080501_200.JPG
  • View over Cygnet Bay Pearl Farm
    CygnetBay20120403_8446.JPG
  • Cygnet Bay Pearl Farm owner James Brown with his sons Dean and Shea at Shell Island
    CygnetBay20120402_7998.JPG
  • Child's Bucket and Spade set
    Beach20081218_006.JPG
  • A scenic, secluded bay nestled between sea-swept rocky headlands, Hellfire Bay is one of the most beautiful bays in the park and a great spot to enjoy a picnic or a refreshing dip in calm conditions.  The bay is thought to have been named after St Elmo's fire – a bluish flame-like electrical discharge that sometimes occurs above ship's masts.
    HellfireBay20140324_8678.JPG
  • Swimmers at Longreach Bay
    Rottnest20100316_1135.JPG
  • Hillarys Boat Harbour and Sorrento Quay
    Hillarys20100307_2512.jpg
  • A scenic, secluded bay nestled between sea-swept rocky headlands, Hellfire Bay is one of the most beautiful bays in the park and a great spot to enjoy a picnic or a refreshing dip in calm conditions.  The bay is thought to have been named after St Elmo's fire – a bluish flame-like electrical discharge that sometimes occurs above ship's masts.
    HellfireBay20140324_8673.JPG
  • The Basin, Rottnest
    Rottnest20100316_0952.JPG
  • Tourists at Longreach Bay, Rottnest Island
    Rottnest20100316_1629.JPG
  • Rottnest Island lighthouse
    RK20080501_198.JPG
  • A scenic, secluded bay nestled between sea-swept rocky headlands, Hellfire Bay is one of the most beautiful bays in the park and a great spot to enjoy a picnic or a refreshing dip in calm conditions.  The bay is thought to have been named after St Elmo's fire – a bluish flame-like electrical discharge that sometimes occurs above ship's masts.
    HellfireBay20140324_8691.JPG
  • A scenic, secluded bay nestled between sea-swept rocky headlands, Hellfire Bay is one of the most beautiful bays in the park and a great spot to enjoy a picnic or a refreshing dip in calm conditions.  The bay is thought to have been named after St Elmo's fire – a bluish flame-like electrical discharge that sometimes occurs above ship's masts.
    HellfireBay20140324_8659.JPG
  • Child's Bucket and Spade set
    Beach20081218_010.JPG
  • Injidup Beach on a wild and woolly winter's day. This beach is one of the easiest good surf breaks to access in the area
    InjidupBeach20100527_243.JPG
  • Injidup Beach on a wild and woolly winter's day. This beach is one of the easiest good surf breaks to access in the area
    InjidupBeach20100527_239.JPG
  • Injidup Beach on a wild and woolly winter's day. This beach is one of the easiest good surf breaks to access in the area
    InjidupBeach20100527_202.JPG
  • Injidup Beach on a wild and woolly winter's day. This beach is one of the easiest good surf breaks to access in the area
    InjidupBeach20100527_251.JPG
  • Injidup Beach on a wild and woolly winter's day. This beach is one of the easiest good surf breaks to access in the area
    InjidupBeach20100527_154.JPG
  • Injidup Beach on a wild and woolly winter's day. This beach is one of the easiest good surf breaks to access in the area
    InjidupBeach20100527_250.JPG
  • Injidup Beach on a wild and woolly winter's day. This beach is one of the easiest good surf breaks to access in the area
    InjidupBeach20100527_242.JPG
  • Pearling Lugger off Cable Beach
    WCP060515_005481.JPG
  • Pearling Lugger off Cable Beach
    Broome20061515_010.JPG
  • Maitraya Resort east of Albany on Taylor Inlet.<br />
Idyllically positioned above the picturesque Albany coastline lies Maitraya, one of Australia’s most prestigious luxury retreats.<br />
<br />
Set amongst more than 500 acres of private and secluded bushland, Maitraya delivers to you the best of Western Australia’s renowned southern coastline, and offers breathtaking views of the picturesque Southern Ocean, nearby islands and surrounding mountains.<br />
<br />
Maitraya is offered as a self-catering residence.<br />
<br />
The residence sleeps up to 16 people in complete comfort, and includes eight spacious double bedrooms with king or two single beds, 11 bathrooms, an indoor heated pool, spa, sauna, gym and a large central glass-roofed atrium.<br />
<br />
Outside, the lavishly appointed grounds include access to a safe swimming lagoon and local surfing beach, private gazebo, lake, tennis court, putting green and numerous nature walks.
    Maitraya_20130903_0425.JPG
  • Beagle Bay is the gateway to communities further north such as Djarindjin Community, Bobeiding Community and Ngardalargin. <br />
<br />
The community was established by Trappist monks around 1890. Beagle Bay has a history of caring for stolen children. In 1884, the first ever priest arrived to serve the Catholics in the Kimberley to try and convert the Aboriginal people. Bishop Matthew Gibney founded the Beagle Bay mission, developed in the land of the Nyul Nyul people; this became a site for the Aboriginal people in 1890.  In 1901, Pallottine Fathers from Germany took over the Beagle Bay Mission with two priests and four brothers. In 1907, the St John of God Sisters began to run a mission school at Beagle Bay and in 1918 the famous church was opened. It features a pearl shell altar which is now a tourist attraction. The Beagle Bay Mission subsequently became home to Indigenous people from across the Kimberley and further afield. Lawman and artist Butcher Joe Nangan lived and worked at the mission from around 1920 to the 1960s.The Aboriginal community gathered vast amounts of shell from the beaches, and more than 60 thousand bircks went into the building. The church was finished in 1918.<br />
The ceiling was plastered and decorated with shells to represent stars and the original roof was made from tree boughs and brush, until the termites ate it. Flattened kerosene tins were then used. Today it is corrugated iron.<br />
It is the high decorative altar that stands out for its beauty, simplicity and devotion. Hundreds of mother of pearl shell were laid into the plaster, and they glisten with a soft, silvery glow.<br />
Father Thomas Bachmair was the driving force behind the building of the Beagle Bay Church, but within two weeks of its conscreation he died of scepticaemia. His funeral was the first to be held in the new church.<br />
The 12 metre bell tower was a later addition during the 1920s. There is the original bell from the Trappists, and two others that were a gift from a German parish<br />
The com
    BeagleBay20120402_A.JPG
  • Croquet on the lawn at Cape Lodge, Margaret River, Western Australia<br />
<br />
Voted Best Boutique Hotel in Australia 2009 & World’s Best 100 Hotels 2010<br />
<br />
Sitting on its own secluded vineyard in the heart of the Margaret River Wine Country is one of Australia’s finest boutique small luxury hotels.As you meander down the winding driveway of our intimate country estate you will discover why Cape Lodge was voted Luxury Travel Magazine’s Best Boutique Hotel in Australia 2009 and listed as one of the “World’s Best 100 Hotels” 2010.<br />
<br />
Surrounded by stunning forest, lake and parkland scenery Cape Lodge is only minutes away from pristine beaches, coastline and the sparkling waters of the Indian Ocean and neighbours the great Margaret River wine estates of Mosswood, Vasse Felix, Cullen and Pier
    CapeLodge20100527_137.JPG
  • Croquet on the lawn at Cape Lodge, Margaret River, Western Australia<br />
<br />
Voted Best Boutique Hotel in Australia 2009 & World’s Best 100 Hotels 2010<br />
<br />
Sitting on its own secluded vineyard in the heart of the Margaret River Wine Country is one of Australia’s finest boutique small luxury hotels.As you meander down the winding driveway of our intimate country estate you will discover why Cape Lodge was voted Luxury Travel Magazine’s Best Boutique Hotel in Australia 2009 and listed as one of the “World’s Best 100 Hotels” 2010.<br />
<br />
Surrounded by stunning forest, lake and parkland scenery Cape Lodge is only minutes away from pristine beaches, coastline and the sparkling waters of the Indian Ocean and neighbours the great Margaret River wine estates of Mosswood, Vasse Felix, Cullen and Pier
    CapeLodge20100527_127.JPG
  • Beagle Bay is the gateway to communities further north such as Djarindjin Community, Bobeiding Community and Ngardalargin. <br />
<br />
The community was established by Trappist monks around 1890. Beagle Bay has a history of caring for stolen children. In 1884, the first ever priest arrived to serve the Catholics in the Kimberley to try and convert the Aboriginal people. Bishop Matthew Gibney founded the Beagle Bay mission, developed in the land of the Nyul Nyul people; this became a site for the Aboriginal people in 1890.  In 1901, Pallottine Fathers from Germany took over the Beagle Bay Mission with two priests and four brothers. In 1907, the St John of God Sisters began to run a mission school at Beagle Bay and in 1918 the famous church was opened. It features a pearl shell altar which is now a tourist attraction. The Beagle Bay Mission subsequently became home to Indigenous people from across the Kimberley and further afield. Lawman and artist Butcher Joe Nangan lived and worked at the mission from around 1920 to the 1960s.The Aboriginal community gathered vast amounts of shell from the beaches, and more than 60 thousand bircks went into the building. The church was finished in 1918.<br />
The ceiling was plastered and decorated with shells to represent stars and the original roof was made from tree boughs and brush, until the termites ate it. Flattened kerosene tins were then used. Today it is corrugated iron.<br />
It is the high decorative altar that stands out for its beauty, simplicity and devotion. Hundreds of mother of pearl shell were laid into the plaster, and they glisten with a soft, silvery glow.<br />
Father Thomas Bachmair was the driving force behind the building of the Beagle Bay Church, but within two weeks of its conscreation he died of scepticaemia. His funeral was the first to be held in the new church.<br />
The 12 metre bell tower was a later addition during the 1920s. There is the original bell from the Trappists, and two others that were a gift from a German parish<br />
The com
    BeagleBay20120402_.JPG
  • Beagle Bay is the gateway to communities further north such as Djarindjin Community, Bobeiding Community and Ngardalargin. <br />
<br />
The community was established by Trappist monks around 1890. Beagle Bay has a history of caring for stolen children. In 1884, the first ever priest arrived to serve the Catholics in the Kimberley to try and convert the Aboriginal people. Bishop Matthew Gibney founded the Beagle Bay mission, developed in the land of the Nyul Nyul people; this became a site for the Aboriginal people in 1890.  In 1901, Pallottine Fathers from Germany took over the Beagle Bay Mission with two priests and four brothers. In 1907, the St John of God Sisters began to run a mission school at Beagle Bay and in 1918 the famous church was opened. It features a pearl shell altar which is now a tourist attraction. The Beagle Bay Mission subsequently became home to Indigenous people from across the Kimberley and further afield. Lawman and artist Butcher Joe Nangan lived and worked at the mission from around 1920 to the 1960s.The Aboriginal community gathered vast amounts of shell from the beaches, and more than 60 thousand bircks went into the building. The church was finished in 1918.<br />
The ceiling was plastered and decorated with shells to represent stars and the original roof was made from tree boughs and brush, until the termites ate it. Flattened kerosene tins were then used. Today it is corrugated iron.<br />
It is the high decorative altar that stands out for its beauty, simplicity and devotion. Hundreds of mother of pearl shell were laid into the plaster, and they glisten with a soft, silvery glow.<br />
Father Thomas Bachmair was the driving force behind the building of the Beagle Bay Church, but within two weeks of its conscreation he died of scepticaemia. His funeral was the first to be held in the new church.<br />
The 12 metre bell tower was a later addition during the 1920s. There is the original bell from the Trappists, and two others that were a gift from a German parish<br />
The com
    BeagleBay20120402_B.JPG
  • Croquet on the lawn at Cape Lodge, Margaret River, Western Australia<br />
<br />
Voted Best Boutique Hotel in Australia 2009 & World’s Best 100 Hotels 2010<br />
<br />
Sitting on its own secluded vineyard in the heart of the Margaret River Wine Country is one of Australia’s finest boutique small luxury hotels.As you meander down the winding driveway of our intimate country estate you will discover why Cape Lodge was voted Luxury Travel Magazine’s Best Boutique Hotel in Australia 2009 and listed as one of the “World’s Best 100 Hotels” 2010.<br />
<br />
Surrounded by stunning forest, lake and parkland scenery Cape Lodge is only minutes away from pristine beaches, coastline and the sparkling waters of the Indian Ocean and neighbours the great Margaret River wine estates of Mosswood, Vasse Felix, Cullen and Pier
    CapeLodge20100527_119.JPG