The Great Ocean Walk: Victoria’s Coastal Hike

09/22/09  Print This Post Print This Post    11 Comments   Popular   Written by Carlo Alcos
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Great Ocean Walk sign

All photos by author

Yes, driving the Great Ocean Road is nice. But walking the coastline is a much deeper experience.

Most travelers who make their way to the Australian state of Victoria (most commonly Melbourne) eventually find themselves heading to the Great Ocean Road. It’s a stretch of coastline in Victoria’s south that runs around 155 mi/250 km from Torquay to Warrnambool, and which includes the famous 12 Apostles.

Walkers only sign

What many visitors don’t bother to do though, is to hike any part of the 56 mi/91 km trail that hugs the coastline and gets you right down to the beaches. This is where Mother Nature is, away from the cars and buses, and into the bush with the kangaroos, wallabies, and echidnas.

Lots of options

You don’t have to hike the whole thing. You don’t even have to hike half of it. There are many points of entry and exit which facilitate short and long day hikes, and which many visitors explore while using a B&B or hotel for accommodation.

Shuttles can be hired to drop you off and pick you up at agreed-upon spots and times, and they’ll even do bag drop-off and food delivery (although, many purist hikers take major exception to this practice). We used GOR Shuttle to get taxied back to our van — I personally recommend them.

Tours are also available, if that’s your cup of tea.

Hiking on the coast
For the overnight hikers

The Great Ocean Walk (GOW) starts at the Apollo Bay Visitor Information Centre and ends 90+ kms later at Glenample — within viewing distance of the 12 Apostles. For the hardest of the hardcore, this is a suggested 7-night, 8-day walk.

All the campsites on the walk are hike-in only. To minimise the environmental impact, Parks Victoria keeps the number of overnight hikers low, so each campsite has only eight spots for pitching a tent.

The campgrounds are very basic and have composting toilets, one or two untreated rainwater tanks, and a small 3-sided shelter. Open fires are not allowed and if the fire hazard is extreme, you may not even be allowed to cook with an open flame.

Pick and choose your itinerary

Overnight hikers can opt to do one-night/two-day hikes, two-night/three-day hikes, and so on. There are many starting and ending points but you must obtain a camping permit before spending the night.

For a detailed list of possible itineraries, read this very helpful PDF of FAQs.

A popular itinerary

Probably the most popular stretch of the walk is from Johanna Beach to the end at Glenample. This takes in roughly half of the trail — but from all accounts this is the better half. It is three nights, so is doable over a long weekend, which explains why it was booked solid when my wife and I tried to reserve sites over the Labour Day long weekend (early March in Australia).

Yoga at Johanna Beach

Johanna Beach hike-in campsite

But you’re a traveler, and you don’t even know what a weekend is, right? Perfect. We backed it up for one night (starting Thursday instead of Friday) and found ourselves almost completely alone for the whole walk, sharing each campground with only one other couple.

Johanna Beach to Glenample

If you’re driving in, you have two options: park at Johanna Beach and arrange a shuttle at the end to drive you back to your car, or park at the end and get shuttled to Johanna Beach to begin. The latter is better in my opinion, but we were forced to do the former due to time constraints.

The Johanna Beach hike-in campground is around one kilometer from the carpark, although it is all uphill. This is good though as it puts you at the top of the cliff overlooking Joahanna Beach and the coastline beyond. Brilliant view to wake up to the next morning.

Note: the drive-in campground here is free, so if you want to save yourself one night’s costs, keep this in mind.

Kangaroo spotting

The remaining two campsites you would use are Ryan’s Den and Devil’s Kitchen, in that order. The campgrounds are spaced around 9 mi/15 km apart from each other, so it is an honest day’s hike, especially packing full gear (including your trash — carry out what you carry in).

It’s an undulating trail as you follow the topography of fingers of land that reach into the sea. The vegetation is colourful and varied, and you’ll even pass some blackberry bushes — make sure to pause and fill up on some berry goodness.

When sunny, the ocean to your left is a rich blue, reminiscent of the Mediterranean but with the wildness of the Oregon Coast.

Things to consider

*There are some stretches of beach walking (e.g. Milanesia and Wreck Beach) that are inaccessible at high tide. Check tide times before you start, otherwise you will have to take the less scenic high routes.

*You must reserve your campsite at least two weeks in advance, and you are only allowed to stay a single night in each one.

Near the 12 Apostles

The 12 Apostles come into view

*It pays to reserve early. As we were the first to book, we were awarded with site #8 at each campsite. The sites are numbered 1-8 from the entrance, with 8 being the closest to the cliff’s edge, meaning the best views.

*When planning your itinerary, keep in mind that you are only permitted to walk in one direction: from Apollo Bay to Glenample. Booking campsites in the reverse direction is not allowed.

*As stated previously, each campground has rainwater tanks, but they are untreated. Make sure to pack some sort of filtration system or purification tablets. At the very minimum, if you don’t have these, boil the water for 10 minutes.

*I’m a big fan of telescopic hiking sticks as they help to distribute the weight of your pack to your arms too. They can also be extremely handy on tricky downhill sections. Highly recommended.

*The toilet houses are quite nice and one of them even has an ocean view. Toilet paper is provided, but it probably wouldn’t hurt to bring a bit extra, just in case.

COMMUNITY CONNECTION

To read my personal account of the walk, check out 4 Nights on the Great Ocean Walk. If you’re just interested in pictures, pop over to my Flickr set.

Trips co-editor Hal Amen witnesses our changing world while Hiking the Chacaltaya Glacier. If you want to get philosophical about the ethics of hiking, read Nature for Sale: The Growing Trend of Wilderness Consumption.


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About the Author

Matador ID: vagabonderz

Carlo (not Carlos) is a contributing editor of Matador Trips. An ex-Vancouverite who calls the world his home, he is currently living in Melbourne, trying to crack the code to sustain the vagabonding lifestyle with the least amount of work possible. Follow him at his blog here...I mean, here.

11 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Hal Amen replied on September 22, 2009

    I can feel it. It’s time to get myself back out on the trail. I only wish it could be this one.

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  • david miller replied on September 22, 2009

    i’ll bet the surfers get down there.

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  • Eva replied on September 22, 2009

    This one’s been on my life list ever since I did one of those quickie Great Ocean Road daytrips out of Melbourne 7 years ago. Dang!

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  • Candice replied on September 22, 2009

    Wowwww, I’d love to do all 90k of this. It looks so untouched.

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    • Carlo Alcos replied to Candice on September 22, 2009

      I’d love to go back and do the other half…there are also lots of other great hikes in the area too. The Great Ocean Road is busy. The Walk is not!

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  • Frank - Our Hiking Blog replied on September 27, 2009

    Hi Carlo,
    Great post on this spectacular walk (it is in our backyard!)

    The views are spectacular, it is not busy and the facilities are fantastic (compared to a lot of Aussie hikes they are 5 star!)

    We have blogged about the walk here and you might enjoy reading about our trip!

    http://frankinoz.blogspot.com/2007/06/great-ocean-walk-may-2007.html There are a lot of other posts about the walk scattered around our Hiking Blog as it is a ripper!
    Frank

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    • Carlo Alcos replied to Frank - Our Hiking Blog on September 27, 2009

      You’re a lucky guy to have that in your backyard! Thanks for the link.

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  • Carlo Alcos replied on September 27, 2009

    Interesting post about the drinking water along the GOW at Frank’s blog:

    http://frankinoz.blogspot.com/2008/01/water-great-ocean-walk.html

    He basically says that the rainwater tanks are perfectly safe to drink from with no further treatment and was their supply during their walk in 2007.

    My wife and I chose to use tablets, but to be honest, I have no idea if they actually did anything! Could have just been placebos :P

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  • Frank - Our Hiking Blog replied on September 27, 2009

    Good point Carlo,
    It never ceases to amaze me the amount of effort visitors to Australia go to to “sterilize” water on hikes. In the last 7 years I have only been sick once from potentially “dodgy” water. That was on a trip to the south of Tasmania where I was so cold, tired and wet I missed the obvious and drank “smelly” water. Just had “the runs” a couple of times and was OK. lol

    I have seen people filter and sterilize water in some of the most pristine areas in the world (also in Tasmania) and have stood next to them, scooped the water into my bottle and drank it while I watched them “process” their next drink – insane imo.

    Cheers and bottoms up!

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  • Monica replied on September 28, 2009

    Did you know that you can hike the Great Ocean Walk in comfort these days? Stay in great accommodations, enjoy good food and someone else moves your luggage while you’re out walking. Check it out at http://www.auswalk.com.au/great-ocean-walk.html

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