AUSTRALIAN GOOD FOOD GUIDE - Home of the Chef Hat Awards

Devonport & The Northwest Attractions

41° South Salmon & Ginseng Farm is a unique tourist attraction near Launceston and Devonport. There is always something to see on the farm, from the picturesque views to their evolving product line...
The world's largest collection of Tasmanian living woody plants live here at the Tasmanian Arboretum, a peaceful landscape of flowers, trees, lakes and birds. With an objective to plant the widest ...
Part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, Cradle Mountain does not hold title as Tasmania’s highest peak, but indeed is one of the most recognisable. One of the most accessible peaks as...
At the mouth of the Mersey River, the Mersey Bluff Lighthouse is a red and white vertical striped beauty, set against the scenic coastal backdrop of blue skies and rocky shores. A popular destinati...
Hook in and experience the waters of Tasmania's north. Numerous estuaries, dams and lake around Cradle Country are renowned for their fishing waters, where trout and Atlantic salmon are the promine...
The Tasmanian Trail is the only long distance, multi use trail in the state, spanning 480 kilometres from Devonport in the north to Dover in the south. Designed to be tackled on horseback, bicycle ...
Once home to the family of Tasmania's only Prime Minister, Home Hill provides an insight into the lives of Joseph Lyons, Dame Enid Lyons and their 12 children. Built for the Lyons family in 1916, H...
Tasmania's highest waterfall, Montezuma Falls is located near Rosebery on the state's west coast, a short 90 minute drive from Burnie. A leisurely three hour return walk takes you to the base of th...
The greatest expanse of cool temperate rainforest in the nation, the Tarkine is a unique Tasmanian experience that speaks for itself. A hidden treasure in the state's north, the Tarkine encompasses...
Tasmania is renowned for being a natural playground, so in order to experience the best on offer, a trip to Rocky Cape National Park is a must. Small but impressive, Rocky Cape sits upon 3,064 hect...
Tasmania's largest collection of steam trains. Vintage trains run along the picturesque Don River, hourly every hour seven days a week except Christmas Day and Good Friday. Monday to Saturday train...
A spectacular gorge near Black Buff (1340m); both these landmarks are well worth a trip from town.
Gives fine views of the coast.
Kings Run is a place where the wild beauty of nature and the guiding hand of humans have come together to restore a patch of land to the prominence it once held in the life cycle of a host of diffi...
The favourite of Australian bushwalkers - 126,000ha of uninhabited rainforest and moorland surrounding some of Tasmania's highest mountains. Part of the Tasmanian World Heritage Wilderness area, i...
Restored and moved to its present site in 1973. Originally licensed in 1847, it is the town's oldest standing building, and still serves "Burnie Inn Cyder" and light refreshments on summer afternoo...
Lake St Clair is the deepest lake in Australia (190m), scooped out by glaciers over 10,000 years ago during the Ice Age. Impressive cliffs rise straight out of the lake, and a submerged moraine ca...