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Koreelah Creek campground

Koreelah National Park

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Overview

Koreelah Creek campground is a delightful camping area and an ideal place to relax. Enjoy picnicking, swimming, walking, birdwatching and admiring the local wildlife.

Accommodation Details
Camping type Tent, Camper trailer site, Caravan site, Camping beside my vehicle
Facilities Amenities block, picnic tables, barbecue facilities, toilets
What to bring Drinking water, cooking water, firewood
Group bookings Book up to 20 people or 5 sites online. For larger groups, make a group booking enquiry.
Please note
  • Sites are marked.
  • Sites are not powered.
  • This is a remote campground, please arrive well prepared.

This delightful camping spot is set among tall eucalypt trees next to the beautiful Koreelah Creek. Find a grassy patch to pitch a tent or pull up your caravan for a relaxing experience in the bush.

Visit for a picnic by the creek, stay for a night, or spend a few days and unwind to the sounds of the gently flowing waters and wind rustling in the trees above.

Enjoy swimming in the creek or wander off on the nearby Gorge walking track. Look out for platypus enjoying an early morning swim and watch for lace monitors around the campsites.

Grab your binoculars and take advantage of the fantastic birdwatching. You’ll see flashes of colour as crimson rosellas and king parrots fly through the trees, and you might also spot Lewin’s honeyeaters and eastern yellow robins. At night, keep your torch handy to see brush-tailed phascogales, sugar gliders and koalas.

For directions, safety and practical information, see visitor info

 

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A family walk a boardwalk section of Bouddi coastal walk, Bouddi National Park. Photo: John Spencer/OEH.

 

Saving Our Species program

Australia is home to more than 500,000 animal and plant species, many of which are found nowhere else in the world. Saving our Species is a statewide conservation program that addresses the growing number of Australian animals and Australian native plants facing extinction.

Koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) in a tree. Photo: Courtesy of Taronga Zoo/OEH

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