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National and state parks – Grampians

Taipan Wall - The Grampians

The National and State parks in the Grampians region are renowned for their rugged mountain ranges, abundant wildlife and spectacular wildflower displays.

The Grampians National Park is the fourth largest national park in Victoria (167,000 hectares) and is renowned for its flora and fauna. Discover over 970 native plant species, 200 species of birds and an abundance of native animals.

The park is made up of four precipitous and spectacular ranges formed millions of years ago when the sandy sediments lifted and tilted to form the distinctive landscape seen today, with steep cliffs one side and relatively gentle slopes on the other.

Nearby parks include the Little Desert National Park, 1,320 square kilometres of wilderness noted for its spectacular spring wildflowers and the elusive Mallee Fowl and Mt Arapiles-Tooan State Park renowned for its dramatic rock formations providing some of the best rock climbing in the world.

The Grampians

Grampians National Park

Renowned for its rugged Mtain ranges and glorious wildflower displays this park is one of Victoria's finest and is home to abundant bird life and almost a third of Victoria's plant species.

Mount Arapiles

Mt Arapiles-Tooan State Park

Mt Arapiles is a spectacular formation that rises sharply from the Wimmera plains to form part of the Mt Arapiles-Tooan State Park.

Desert

Little Desert National Park

See abuyndant wildflowers between late winter and early summer and keep an eye out for the shy Mallee Fowl – one of Australia's most fascinating birds.

National Park

Langi Ghiran State Park

This 2695 hectare park contains two distinct land types - rugged granite peaks and gentle sloping open woodland.

National Park

Mount Buangor State Park

This 2400 hectare Park takes in varied eucalypt forest, creek flats, a waterfall, steep escarpments and Mount Buangor.