THE EXPERIENCE
Two Days on the Peron Peninsula
Rugged Tracks Through the National Park
The day begins with pick-up from your clients’ accommodation in Shark Bay. From there, it’s into a 4WD and onto the rugged tracks of Francois Peron National Park – a former sheep station where the red pindan earth drops away into water so blue it barely looks real. The sealed road ends quickly. After that, it’s soft sand and corrugated tracks that most rental cars will never see.
Key stops on the standard route include Cape Peron, where a short boardwalk leads to panoramic views over the peninsula, and Skipjack Point, a lookout where guests regularly spot sharks, rays, and turtles cruising the shallows below. Herald Bight offers a sweeping deserted beach. Cape Rose Cliffs are dramatic – red and white sandstone formations carved by wind and wave.
The guide knows the park intimately. They don’t just drive between lookouts; they read the landscape. Where to find animal tracks, which beaches are sheltered for a swim, where the fishing is likely to be good that day. It’s interpretive touring, not a bus route.
Trade tip: This is a 4WD-only national park. Independent travellers often turn back or get bogged. A guided tour removes the risk entirely and gives your clients access to places they wouldn’t find on their own. For agents building Shark Bay itineraries, this pairs well with a Monkey Mia dolphin experience or a Hamelin Pool stromatolites visit.

Sheltered Bays & Coral Reefs
Shark Bay’s marine environment is extraordinary. It’s home to one of the largest and most diverse seagrass beds on the planet, which supports dugongs, sea turtles, dolphins, and an enormous variety of fish. On this tour, guests kayak across sheltered bays and land on deserted beaches that feel genuinely untouched.
The snorkelling is a highlight that catches people off guard. The coral reefs in the park’s protected waters are teeming with life – tropical fish, rays gliding beneath the kayak, the occasional turtle surfacing nearby. The water clarity in Shark Bay is remarkable, and the guide knows where the best spots are on any given day depending on tide and conditions.
It’s not a high-adrenaline watersport experience. It’s calm, immersive, and surprisingly intimate. Paddling into a bay with no other people in sight, dropping into the water, and realising you’re snorkelling over a reef that most tourists never reach.
Trade tip: The kayaking and snorkelling element is what elevates this beyond a standard 4WD tour. It’s a genuine multi-activity experience. For clients who aren’t confident swimmers, the kayaking alone is worthwhile – and the guide adapts accordingly. Mention the marine life when selling this to clients interested in wildlife or nature photography.

Catch It, Cook It, Eat It
There’s something deeply satisfying about catching your own dinner. The tour includes line fishing in the park’s waters, where the guide helps novices and experienced anglers alike. The species vary by season but the waters around Francois Peron are productive – it’s Shark Bay, after all.
What you catch, you cook. Over an open campfire. The guide handles the fire, the preparation, and the cooking techniques – some of it drawing on traditional bushfood methods. Fresh seafood cooked on hot coals, served alongside a tasting platter and whatever else the day has delivered. It’s simple food, beautifully done.
For clients who don’t fish, the campfire cooking experience still works. The guide prepares fresh seafood regardless, and the act of sitting around a campfire in the middle of a national park with the smell of wood smoke and grilling fish is an experience in itself.
Trade tip: The campfire dining is a strong selling point for the food-and-wine traveller segment. It’s not restaurant dining – it’s better than that for the right client. Photos of campfire cooking and fresh seafood platters generate excellent post-trip social content. Lead with the food imagery when presenting this tour.

Beach Camping Under the Stars
The overnight stay is at an exclusive eco cultural camp on the beach. Not a caravan park. Not a powered site with neighbours. A remote, private camp where the only sounds are waves and the occasional bird call. Guests sleep under the stars – properly under them, not through a tent fly.
As the sun goes down and the campfire burns low, the guide plays the didgeridoo. The Milky Way stretches overhead in a way that city-dwelling travellers genuinely haven’t experienced. Shark Bay sits well south of Perth’s light pollution, and the night sky out on the peninsula is extraordinary.
It’s worth being honest with clients: this is camping. It’s comfortable camping with good food and attentive guiding, but it’s not glamping with king beds and champagne. The appeal is the rawness of it – falling asleep to the sound of the ocean, waking up to sunrise over the bay.
Trade tip: Set expectations clearly. Clients who want luxury lodge-style accommodation should look elsewhere. Clients who want an authentic outback camping experience in a World Heritage landscape with exceptional guiding and food – this is it. It sells particularly well to eco-conscious travellers, adventure seekers, and the “been everywhere, done everything” crowd looking for something genuinely different.

Zuytdorp Cliffs, Dirk Hartog Island & Steep Point
The standard 2-day/1-night tour covers the core of Francois Peron National Park. But for clients with more time and appetite, extended itineraries of 3 to 7 days unlock the wider Shark Bay region – and this is where the landscape becomes truly dramatic.
The Zuytdorp Cliffs are sheer coastal walls rising from the Indian Ocean, named after a Dutch ship wrecked here in 1712. Dirk Hartog Island – the largest island in Western Australia – is a place of raw beauty and ecological significance, with an ambitious rewilding programme underway. Steep Point is the westernmost point of mainland Australia. The blowholes at False Entrance and Thunder Bay are powerful natural displays where ocean swells compress through narrow rock channels.
These extended options transform a good 2-day adventure into a genuine expedition. They work particularly well for small groups, corporate retreats, and special interest touring.
Trade tip: The extended itineraries are where the margin and the story both grow. A 5 to 7 day Shark Bay adventure is a rare product – almost no other operator offers this depth of access. For agents building multi-day Western Australian itineraries, this can form the centrepiece rather than just a day trip. Custom durations are available, so talk to our team about what suits your clients’ schedule.

Traditional Bushfood & Didgeridoo Under the Stars
Woven through the tour is a cultural thread that goes beyond sightseeing. The guide incorporates traditional bushfood knowledge into the journey – identifying plants, preparing food in traditional ways, and sharing stories that connect the landscape to the people who have known it longest.
Guests sample bushfood alongside the fresh seafood. It adds a layer to the dining experience that most camping tours don’t even attempt. It’s educational without being formal, and it sits naturally within the flow of the day.
The evening didgeridoo session around the campfire isn’t a performance. It’s an ambient, reflective moment after a long day outdoors. The sound carries across the beach in a way that feels entirely right for the setting.
Trade tip: For agents packaging cultural awareness programmes, school groups, or clients specifically interested in Indigenous Australian culture, the bushfood and cultural elements can be emphasised and expanded. Talk to our team about tailoring the cultural content for specific groups or educational requirements.

WHAT’S INCLUDED

