Hi all, I hope you and yours are doing well.
Over the last month or so I have been sharing some of our mid-west-coastal Western Australia caravan tour in August. If you missed and you would like to catch up, you can do that here -
- Bullara Station Stay
- Coal Bay - What I discovered exploring Western Australia's coral coast
- Exmouth and the Ningaloo Reef
Today I bring you the next installment - exploring the Shark Bay area on the Peron Peninsula. Here is our map again to orientate yourself. The township of Denham at Shark Bay is located 822 kilometres north of WA's capital, Perth. You should allow a two day drive, stopping somewhere overnight on the way (perhaps Geraldton).
We have been to Shark Bay several times - I can't believe I have never blogged about it before now! So this post will actually have some pics from several visits.
About Shark Bay - Covering an area of more than 2.2 million hectares, it is one of the world’s greatest wilderness treasures.This westernmost part of Australia has a unique combination of wildlife, flora and stunning scenery unlike that found anywhere else. Shark Bay is actually two bays sheltered by peninsulas and a long island. The local Malgana Aboriginal people know it as Gutharraguda, meaning ‘two waters’.
The shoreline of Shark Bay has a ‘W’ shape formed by the Edel Land Peninsula and Dirk Hartog Island to the west, Peron Peninsula in the centre (where the township of Denham and the Monkey Mia Reserve is located), and to the east the mainland of Western Australia.
After our visit to Coral Bay, Exmouth and Bullara Station we travelled south stopping at Carnarvon and Wooramel Station overnight. Wooramel is a great place for a stopover if you are travelling north to south - no power, but there are hot showers, a cafe, and hot tubs! Also bird watching, walk and drive trails. Ask for a map when you book in. There are lovely camping spots by the river... which by the way is usually dry - it's what they call an underground river.
The turnoff to Shark Bay is located at the Overlander Road House on the North West Coastal Highway, 693 kms from Perth. From here it is 139 kilometres to Denham. We were met with windy conditions, squally rain and only 13C driving in.
On a previous trip we visited the Stromatolites at Hamelin Pool - 25kms from The Overlander Roadhouse. I am sharing images from that trip.
Hamelin Pool - about Hamelin Pool is home to the most diverse and abundant examples of stromatolites in the world. Also referred to as ‘living fossils’, stromatolites are living representatives of life before dinosaurs. The Stromatolites represent life on this planet between 3.5 billion to 700 million years ago when there was no other complex life on Earth.
Unfortunately cyclone Seroja in 2021 severely damaged the 200m boardwalk which gave visitors close up views of the stromatolites and is yet to be repaired. The stromatolites are extremely sensitive to damage so visitors are requested to only view them from the land, which is unfortunately why my photos aren't very clear.
While at Hamelin you can learn about the old Hamelin Pool Telegraph Station which was built in 1884.
This is one of the buildings in Denham built from shell blocks
Shell Beach-about -The beach at Shell Beach is made up of trillions of tiny shells from one type of animal, the Fragum cockle, which make up the beaches here and around L’haridon Bight. Deposits are 10 metres deep in places.
One of the characteristics that limits life in the waters is hypersalinity. As with Hamelin Pool, the combination of high evaporation and the Faure Sill (a geological feature in Shark Bay, that is a shallow bank formed by seagrasses) limiting water flow, causes the water here to be twice as salty as the sea. The result is a lack of competition and predators for the Fragum cockle, leading to an incredible abundance of this one species.
Just south of Shell Beach is an electrified barrier fence stretching several kilometres across the narrow part of the peninsula. This fence is a vital part of Project Eden, a conservation project limiting feral animals on Peron Peninsula.
When French explorers Nicholas Baudin and François Péron visited Shark Bay in 1801 there were 23 species of mammals. Less than half of them remained in 1990.These local extinctions were due to habitat destruction and competition for food by stock and rabbits and predation by introduced foxes and feral cats. Project Eden was launched to reverse this ecological destruction.
Rehabilitation includes native animal breeding projects, the Government purchased Peron Pastoral Station in 1990 removing all the goats, sheep, and cattle, feral animal control (rabbits, foxes and cats), the construction of the electrified fence stopping more feral animals entering the Peninsula. You can read more about it at the link - Project Eden
Here is a pic of the electric fence. Where it crosses the road there is a metal grid for traffic, but which animals can't cross.
I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!



















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