The best short walks near Melbourne.

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Cape Schanck walk on the Mornington Peninsula, Melanie Ball

Cape Schanck walk on the Mornington Peninsula, Melanie Ball

Going on a hike doesn’t always mean strapping on hiking boots, mega backpacks and ten litres of water – there are short walks near Melbourne that showcase some of the best scenery in Victoria without requiring the skills of an Everest mountaineer. Here are our picks for the top five walks near Melbourne, from Melanie Ball’s Top Walks in Victoria.

Cape Schanck, Mornington Peninsula

This 8km, 3-hour walk of moderate difficulty gives hikers an unbeatable package deal of beach and cliff walks, wildflowers and birds, interesting history and remarkable geology on a visit to one of Australia’s most spectacularly sited lighthouses. Beginning in Cape Schanck Lighthouse carpark, you’re on the cliffs for much of this scenic walk to Bushrangers Bay.

For more info on Cape Schanck, purchase the PDF of the walk here.

You Yangs, Western Plains

The You Yangs is the strange looking set of mountains that rise abruptly out of the plains between Melbourne and Geelong. It takes 2–3 hours to complete the moderately difficult 7.1km loop track to the pinnacle which will give spectacular panoramas of plains, Melbourne’s skyline, Port Phillip Bay and the peninsulas. It’s recommended for new bushwalkers, families and other hikers.

For more info on the You Yangs walk, purchase the PDF here.

Cape Woolamai, Phillip Island

Pink granite cliffs, mutton-bird rookeries, wild-ride surf and safe swimming; the many wonders of Cape Woolamai, on Phillip Island, are revealed on this easy and stunning 9.2km coastal loop.

Hanging Rock, central Victoria

This fun short walk promises rugged, labyrinthine rock formations, sweeping views and more than a touch of mystery – this is the rock made famous by the Picnic at Hanging Rock, where schoolgirls disappeared at the rock and where never seen again. Hopefully that won’t happen to you; the walk should be only be around 2 hours long.

For more info on the Hanging Rock walk, purchase the PDF here.

The Great Ocean Walk from Aire River to Johanna Beach

Arguably the best day walk in Victoria, this 14km, 6-hour walk means you’ll be able to really appreciate the incredible views of unpredictable ocean and tranquil river, surf beach and honeycombed cliffs, tall forest and flower embroidered heath, this wonderful walk shows off the Great Ocean Walk’s diversity of landscapes and flora.

     

Take the best short walk in Grampians National Park

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The Grampians, Tourism Victoria

The Grampians, Tourism Victoria

Melanie Ball likes to explore Victoria feet first, and in this extract from her new book, Top Walks in Victoria, she reveals her favourite short walk in the famous Grampians National Park.

Hollow Mountain Walk, Grampians National Park

WALK: 3.1km return
TIME REQUIRED: 2 hours
BEST TIME: Any time but there is little protection up top in wild weather
GRADE: Moderate
ENVIRONMENT: Sandstone outcrop
BEST MAP: This one
TOILETS: Pit toilets at Hollow Mountain carpark
FOOD: None – bring your own
TIPS: Wear loose clothing or you might rip your pants asunder

On a scale of 1 to 10 for adventure and scenery, this walk top scores with outdoor fun lovers of all ages. Part walk, part rock climb, part grandstand, this is the most-fun short walk in the Grampians, if not Victoria.

One of several walks in the northern Grampians, far from the crowd-pulling Wonderland area and Halls Gap, the short Hollow Mountain climb is just that: a climb, with pitches ranging from gentle to hand-over-hand up and little flat ground. Which is why children love it, often getting up and down at mountain-goat speed and with a sure-footedness that embarrasses (and sometimes terrifies) more cautious mature walkers.Lots of adults, however, can and do get to the top, but this walk is not recommended for anyone with vertigo or dodgy knees or who is uncomfortable clambering up rocks.

The fun begins in Hollow Mountain carpark (where there are pit toilets), off unsealed Mt Zero Rd, about 36 kilometres north of Halls Gap via unsealed Mt Zero Halls Gap Rd. From the carpark the walking track heads south towards lumpy red-and-grey natural stonework.

The Disneyesque brown-and-yellow orchids sometimes seen just near the carpark are leopard orchids, one of more than 900 indigenous flowers identified in the Grampians, 20 found nowhere else. The tiny cup-shaped white flowering shrub among the desert banksias along the first section of the walk, which in flower give the impression of a dusting of snow, are Grampians thryptomene.

After a brief warm-up through thryptomene, grass trees, desert banksias and eucalypts, on a sandy track with occasional steps, the real climbing starts, initially up a rocky spine to the foot of a sandstone cliff , stained with iron and cracked and undercut by time. From here you clamber up, over and between great lumps of stone tucked against the leaning cliff. Navigating these giant stepping stones is when your clothes are most at risk, from ripping when stretching a leg or from rubbing on coarse stone if you’re more comfortable working up (and down) rocky slopes on your backside.

Above here the going is easier but still far from flat. Stepping up the mountain’s rocky face brings you ever closer to a monumental wall of layered ochre rock, which is eventually right in front of you. To the left of the wall is a separate, massive cracked rock – or two rocks – at the base of which is a dark opening. This is the ‘hollow’ that gives the mountain its non-Aboriginal name (Hollow Mountain’s Indigenous name is Wudjub-Guyan or ‘spear in the middle’, so perhaps the cave is a gaping wound).

From inside the cavern you get a fabulous view, framed by the cave mouth, of Mt Zero, another hill you can climb, and the Wimmera Plains, their rows of olive trees and fields of canola stretching to the horizon. Out of the cavern and around this rock to the left, you enter an often-windy stone-walled corridor leading to a sudden drop-off. From the edge you can see along the cliff and down to a rocky demise.

Turning back, walk along the rock wall, passing the hollow rock and the track down to the carpark and following a trail of arrows painted on the rough stone. As you descend to the wall’s end, look left and you’ll see sky through a window in the wall. You might also see silhouetted figures, often hanging upside down from the ceiling. These are not bats!

They’re boulderers, mostly young men and women who rock climb without ropes, seeming to defy gravity as they crab across walls and low ceilings of caves. Walkers in the Grampians often see groups of people to-ing and fro-ing from bouldering sites with climbing mats folded in half on their backs.

Arrows lead around the end of the wall and up a rock slope with a crazy-paving pattern, past the entrance to the cave you looked through below (stopping to watch the boulderers gives you a good rest/drink stop). You might also see other groups of climbers working on stone overhangs further up. At the top of the rock slide the track loops left and up more rocky tiers.

Up top, 300m above the carpark and well clear of any protective trees, the rock has been – and continues to be – worked by wind and water into extraordinary shapes, often with sharp edges, and hollowed to depressions that collect rainwater that reflects the sky. The Mt Difficult Range (which has more great walks) reaches to the south of you; to the west and north are plains.

From here you retrace your steps, around the wall, down the natural shelving and over the boulders, for a cruise back through a sea of thryptomene.

Top Walks in Victoria

Victoria offers a jaw-dropping diversity of bushwalks through areas rich in natural wonders and colourful human history. Experienced travel writer Melanie Ball has hiked every track in this book for walkers of all levels of experience. There are walks for each part of the state, including the renowned Wilsons Promontory Lighthouse loop and salt lake circuits in the Mallee region. Most of the tracks can be completed in a few hours, but there are some more difficult multi-day walks for those wanting more of a challenge. For each walk there is detailed trail information, a map, photographs and beautiful illustrations of fauna and flora that you’re likely to see along the way. Find out more!