Bladensburg National Park is a large park protecting Mitchell Grass Downs and Channel Country.
The Burke and Wills Dig Tree is one of Australia's National icons and an enduring reminder of the pioneering spirit.
The Cameron Corner loop is an ideal way to experience the real Outback, discover the history of the early pioneers and enjoy the wildlife.
The Charleville Botanical Reserve aims to showcase the region’s vegetation within a 2,000 hectare reserve, just 15km south of Charleville.
Corella Dam and Clem Walton Park are fabulous places for a picnic, some fishing, kayaking or a night under the stars camping, for free.
Red sandplains and mulga scrubs give little hint to the lakes, rivers and wetlands that make Currawinya one of Australia’s most important inland waterbird habitats.
Experience the rich Indigenous and settler histories, replenishing waters and shimmering mirages, and stunning desert-like vistas of this unique park.
The Dowling Track is Four Wheel Drive experience linking Back ‘o’ Bourke and beyond to Quilpie in South West Queensland, total kilometres, 567.
Amid the gorges and rocky formations of the Gowan Range tablelands, Idalia National Park protects extensive mulga woodlands, the Bulloo River's headwaters and threatened wildlife.
A place where there is nothing but you and nature, a birdwatchers and bushwalkers paradise.
A colourful maze of gorges, sandstone outcrops, striking rock formations, and rare and threatened plant species.
The John Egan Pioneer Track highlights the ecological and cultural values of the Stonehenge town reserve.
One feature you definitely won’t miss in Julia Creek is the 30 metre wine glass shaped water tower.
Lake Bindegolly National Park is a remote but accessible park on the edge of Queensland's channel country. This park is a bird and sunset-watcher's paradise,
Nestled beneath Murphy’s Range in the central highlands, Lake Murphy is a perched lake and a photographer's dream.
This is Queensland’s channel country, where flooding rains and devastating droughts are part of western Queensland life.
This remote park has dry, flat plains criss-crossed by watercourses and covered in open eucalypt, paperbark and acacia woodlands and grasslands.
This striking mountain rises above plains of grazing land, and features basalt columns, rocky scree slopes, open woodlands, vine thickets and diverse bird life.
Munga-Thirri National Park, aka Simpson Desert, offers outstanding outback scenery of parallel wind-blown sand dunes and clumps of spinifex for intrepid outback explorers.
Towering cliffs of coloured sandstone, pockets of vine forest and deep permanent waterholes along Porcupine Creek contrast strikingly with the savanna plains surrounding Porcupine Gorge.
The Australian Fossil Mammal Sites at Riversleigh and Naracoorte were inscribed in the World Heritage List in 1994.
Tambo's Wilderness Way is a self-drive tour through an area of rugged beauty, known as the ‘Roof of Queensland’.
Tregole National Park straddles the boundary between two natural regions, the Brigalow Belt and the Mulga Lands.
One of Australia’s rarest plants, the Waddi Trees (Acacia puece) have spiky, needle-like leaves and thick bark. M
Immerse yourself in a colourful landscape of golden-green spinifex, white-barked ghost gums and red sand dunes.