An unforgettable trail of things to do in Tasmania’s Huon Valley

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Take a bite out of the Huon Valley with this ultimate guide.

There’s a new guard forming in the Huon Valley. An undercurrent of fresh blood, creativity and craftsmanship unite the new breed of businesses that have popped up in this fertile string of hamlets, backed by Tasmania’s largest national park, Southwest. Unsurprising then that both Conde Nast Traveler and the New York Times declared Lutruwita/Tasmania’s Huon Valley one of the top places to visit in 2024.

Amongst the rolling farmland and tiny townships perched along the Huon River, fine dining is served in humble farmhouses, multi-million-dollar art installations pop up in unexpected places, and roadside stalls deliver gourmet riches.

This south-western pocket of Tasmania, on the lands of the Melukerdee people of the Huon River and the Lyluequonny people of the Far South, is also one of the best places in the world to catch a glimpse of the Southern Lights; a place devoid of light pollution and blissfully underdeveloped.

Starting just 30 minutes south of Hobart and stretching down to the southernmost tip of Tasmania at Cockle Creek, the Huon Valley is filled with riches of both landscape and produce. Consider this your essential list of things to do in the Huon Valley.

Give yourself enough time – this place invites you to go slow.

Dine at the best restaurants in the Huon Valley

In the past, Gourmet Farmer Matthew Evans had gourmands flocking to his Fat Pig Farm in Cygnet for paddock-to-plate feasts. With the restaurant recently closed, destination dining now comes in the form of a very personal, very intimate lunchtime affair in Huonville. At renowned chef and keen forager, Analiese Gregory ’s home to be exact.

Analiese Gregory fishing in the Huon Valley
Chef Analiese Gregory spends most of her time out in the wilderness. (Image: Adam Gibson)

Yet to be named, the restaurant will see the ex-Franklin (Hobart) chef cooking what makes her heart sing – much of it on coals – utilising handpicked local produce, as well as things she’s grown or foraged herself. A table for 10, crafted from 100-year-old reclaimed Oregon pine, sits expectantly in the cosy space. Bookings, when they open, will be snapped up quickly.

the exterior of The Kiln restaurant
Make a pitstop at The Kiln. (Image: Celeste Mitchell)

In the meantime, lunch is best enjoyed at a languid pace at The Kiln Eatery , a restaurant and bar housed in an early 1900s oast in nearby Ranelagh that opened in mid-2023. Sit by the fire in the sun-drenched enclosed courtyard and, in between courses, head upstairs to take a stickybeak at the heritage-listed hops drying room. Slip into the bar to sample the deQuetteville gin being distilled next door from botanicals found in the gardens of adjoining BnB, Clifton Estate .

a dessert on offer at The Kiln restaurant
Don’t pass up the chance to try specialty desserts at The Kiln. (Image: Celeste Mitchell)

Come nightfall, step into the convivial vibe of Lost Captain  – an old manor house reborn as a restaurant and taphouse on the Huon River where punters cradle local brews and tuck into Bruny Island oysters and tikka fried chicken. Don’t skip the black garlic and onion butter, served with warm Poolish and Co. sourdough from Cygnet.

Seek out the best Huon Valley bakeries & cafes

Take a break from op shopping your way through Huonville and join the locals working on laptops while cradling coffees at Reba Sear , a cafe and homewares store set in a curvy art deco corner building.

the cafe exterior of Reba Sear
Pop into Reba Sear for a caffeine fix. (Image: Celeste Mitchell)

Afterwards, head to Summer Kitchen Bakery  in Ranelagh for a chunk of coconut-studded spelt carrot cake or a Bruny Island wallaby pie with potato.

bread on display at Summer Kitchen Organic Bakery
Fill your basket with freshly baked bread at Summer Kitchen Organic Bakery. (Image: Chris Phelps)

While strolling Cygnet’s charming main street, make a stop at Red Velvet Lounge for some nasi goreng, or perhaps a bowl of coco pops. In Geeveston, brunch at The Old Bank cafe and stop by Harvest and Light  – a small-batch picklery with an exclusively female-winemaker list of wines by the glass.

the exterior of The Red Velvet Lounge
Stop by the Red Velvet Lounge for some nasi goreng. (Image: Chris Phelps)

Roll through Dover on your way further south and you can’t miss Wild Bird , which opened in November 2023. Grab a table out front to enjoy coffee, delicious toasties, and pastries baked in-house.

a toastie with coffee at Wild Bird cafe
Power through the day with a toastie and coffee at Wild Bird cafe. (Image: Celeste Mitchell)

In the entranceway, books by local authors, artists and photographers line shelves also laden with local honey and ceramic keep cups.

books, honey and ceramic cups on display at Wild Bird
Check out the books and honey on display at Wild Bird. (Image: Celeste Mitchell)

Hop between Huon Valley wineries

Chardonnay and pinot noir are the stars of the Huon Valley wine scene, in Tasmania’s southernmost wine region, while the handful of family-owned wineries and cellar doors are relaxed and inviting.

a plantation of grapevines at Kate Hill Wines
Wine lovers should make a beeline for this well-loved Huon Valley winery. (Image: Chris Phelps)

With an intimate tasting room adjoining an 1800s heritage-listed cottage with views of Huon Belle – aka the vision of Sleeping Beauty locals say you can see in the mountain range – a visit to Kate Hill Wines  feels a little fairytale-like itself. From delicate, creamy sparkling to possibly the coolest climate shiraz in the Southern Hemisphere, Kate’s range of wines is complemented by tasting plates of local goodies, or on Saturdays, sourdough pizzas and live music.

the outdoor deck with a fireplace at Kate Hill Wines
Get cosy by the fireplace at Kate Hill Wines. (Image: Celeste Mitchell)

Try to time your visit to the Huon Valley to enjoy lunch at Home Hill Winery , their restaurant housed in a rammed earth building surrounded by vines and farm animals. The former apple farm has flourished into a six-hectare vineyard producing some of Australia’s best pinot noir.

Book ahead for a private guided tasting at Mewstone Wines  in Flowerpot to sample their estate-grown drops and more experimental hughes & hughes wines , made with hand-selected contract grapes. This handsome Huon Valley winery also serves up all-Tasmanian platters and showstopping views over the D’Entrecasteaux Channel.

Sip on Huon Valley cider

You can’t visit the Huon Valley without sampling some of its cider and Willie Smith’s Apple Shed  is one of the best places to start. Come lunchtime, the shed quickly fills with punters, many making the pilgrimage for a slice of apple pie.

a table-top view of apple pie at Willie Smith’s Apple Shed
Indulge in a slice of apple pie at Willie Smith’s Apple Shed. (Image: Stu Gibson)

Grab a tasting paddle to sample the core range or limited-release ciders to enjoy with your meal – the apple shed toastie is a stalwart. After you’ve listened to the tasting notes via a QR code on the menu and wandered through the apple museum to learn the four-generation backstory, it’s hard to exit past the shop corner without picking up a four-pack or a mulled cider kit for home.

the entrance to Willie Smith's Apple Shed
Built in 1942, Willie Smith’s Apple Shed is a significant part of Tasmania’s apple history. (Image: Stu Gibson)

Keen to keep the cider tasting going? Drop into Pagan Cider House in Cygnet where the cider range extends to cherries and berries or Frank’s Cider House  in Franklin where the Frank family have been growing apples and pears – used today in their ciders – since 1836.

Stop at a roadside stall

Be sure to have some cash handy because you can barely drive down a road in the Huon Valley without spotting a roadside stall. Apples are the most common finds – this is Apple capital after all, with bags of crunchy, juicy varieties beckoning from old fridges and wooden sheds – but you’ll also find fresh veggies, flowers, eggs and herbs for very old school prices.

a roadside stall selling apples
Spot roadside stalls selling fresh produce. (Image: Paul County)

Drive along Glen Huon Road towards Glen Huon to find the sweetest shed filled with freshly baked pastries (@paradiseregained2022 ).

pastries on display at Paradise Regained
Grab a pastry at Paradise Regained. (Image: Celeste Mitchell)

Bag up your choices – blueberry Danish and orange chocolate cruffin, perhaps – and pop your money in the honesty box. A few steps away you’ll also find a little library alongside bunches of spray-free broccoli and fresh flowers.

cyclists stopping by a roadside stall
Be sure to make a stop at a roadside stall. (Image: Paul County)

Indulge in a little hot/cold therapy

The ritual of sauna takes on a heady new dimension in the Huon Valley when Elsewhere Sauna  pops up on weekends. The mobile sauna was lovingly crafted from an old box trailer, lined with low-impact plantation timber and fitted out with handcrafted furniture and hand-pressed tiles.

Book ahead to nab a spot and indulge in a little hot/cold therapy on the shores of Randall Bay (Sundays) or Drip Beach (fortnightly on Saturdays), with herbal tea and body scrub provided.

Visit a tavern with a difference

On the shores of the Esperance River in Strathblane, the lighting is kept deliberately low at River Run Lodge  to let the stars dazzle above. Previously an old school camp, an ambitious purchase and “hell-for-leather" renovation over five months saw the log-clad tavern and adjoining bougie bunkhouses open in early 2021.

It’s managed to stay somewhat under the radar. That is until Tasmania Parks and Wildlife (PWS) cleared the final hurdle in late April 2024 to approve Transformer – a $4 million art installation coming soon to Ida Bay, 20 kilometres down the road, from the team behind Dark Mofo. Now, this southern slice of the Huon Valley looks set to attract a new wave of travellers, all of whom will be looking for a place to sleep and enjoy a drink.

Visit on a Friday or Saturday evening and you can expect local beer, wine and spirits served up alongside live music and a cracking bar menu. Get there early enough and you might even spot dolphins playing in the shallows outside!

Keen to check out other areas of Tasmania? Follow our guide to all things Tassie.
Celeste Mitchell
With visions of hosting Getaway, Celeste Mitchell graduated with a Bachelor of Journalism and entered the hard-hitting world of boy bands, puberty, and fashion, writing for magazines like Girlfriend, Total Girl, CLEO and TV Hits in the early noughties (there was a lot of Twilight references). Since switching gears to full-time freelancer in 2013, focused exclusively on travel, she’s criss-crossed the globe, opened a co-working space, lived in Mexico, and co-founded slow and sustainable site, Life Unhurried. The Sunshine Coast-based author (Life Unhurried & Ultimate Beaches Australia, Hardie Grant) and mum of two regularly pinches herself that she gets to explore new places and ask all the nosy questions she wants in the name of work.
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5 of the best day trips from Hobart

Hobart has quietly become our coolest capital, but the real wonder lies just beyond the city limits.

In the cool shade of Kunyani/ Mt Wellington, Hobart has earned a reputation. Home to culture-defining Dark MOFO, the city blends rugged, raw wilderness and rule-breaking galleries. But, step beyond the thrumming capital’s border and you’ll find a new perspective: historic towns, Jurassic-era cliffs and a UNESCO City of Gastronomy. With ALL Accor as your home away from home, fill your days with epicurean odysseys and wild scenery on the best day trips from Hobart.

Where to stay

Behind every good road trip is the perfect home base. Somewhere central to review your camera roll, make the most of Hobart’s dining scene and relax before setting off again.

For modern, Tasmanian-inspired design, book a stay at the Movenpick Hotel Hobart . Standing at the Salamanca Markets, look to the Hobart skyline and the award-winning hotel will catch your eye. As the third-tallest building in the CBD, the views across the harbour toward Antarctica are totally unique to your room. Here, end each day at the daily free chocolate hour (plus a free Movenpick ice cream for the little ones).

For a more budget-conscious option, head to the picture book, sandstone buildings of Macquarie Street. Nestled along the buzzing, historic streetscape, you’ll find Tasmania’s biggest hotel: the Ibis Styles . Return home each day to defrost in one of the hotel’s two saunas. Make use of the proximity to MONA, or take an easy stroll to the candy-coloured cottages of Battery Point between your adventures.

A stylish, Tasmanian-inspired bedroom at Mövenpick Hotel Hobart, your perfect base for relaxing after the best day trips from Hobart.
Elevate your Hobart stay with sleek style at Mövenpick.

1. Bruny Island

Craggy cliffs and tropical-hued, white sand beaches signal your arrival to Bruny Island/ Lunawanna-Alonnah.

Start your day trip at the island’s most iconic spot, the Neck Game Reserve. Scale the Trunganini steps to gaze out over the teensy stretch of land that juts through the sea connecting the two ends of the island.

Catch a rare glimpse of the white furred wallabies that call Bruny Island home at Adventure Bay. Then, for ocean-fresh oysters, pull into the drive-thru window at Get Shucked . Sample Bruny Island cheese at the cellar door before catching the ferry home with an esky full of local produce.

Bruny Island Neck is an isthmus of land connecting north and south Bruny Island.
Begin your adventure with a climb and a view. (Image: Elise Weaver)

2. Mount Wellington

At 1271 metres, Mount Wellington watches protectively over Hobart. Follow the winding road to climb through alpine forest and tufts of snow to reach the summit. Gaze down over Hobart and out to sea, or over your shoulder to the southwestern wilderness.

Reset your adrenaline with a mountain bike ride back down. Or, make like the locals and head into the mountain on foot. Try the hike to the Jurassic-period Organ Pipes which slips under the mountain’s magnificent dolerite cliffs (perfect for families thanks to the trail’s minimal incline).

For a view of Mount Wellington itself, hike nearby Cathedral Rock.

No matter where you are in Hobart you are never far away from the City's beloved mountain, Kunanyi / Mount Wellington
Climb through alpine forest to the summit. (Image: Paul Flemming)

2. Port Arthur

Constructed entirely by convicts, the manicured gardens and penal buildings of Port Arthur offer a day trip that practically hums with history.

The rugged, seagirt location was chosen for its difficult escape conditions. Now, you can cruise the coast below the towering, jagged cliffs of the Tasman National Park or wander the sloping fields of fragrant lavender.

Tickets to Port Arthur include a walking tour and harbour cruise. See the Isle of the Dead where 1000 men are buried in marked and unmarked graves. And Point Puer, Britain’s first prison for children.

The Port Arthur Historic Site is one of Australia's most important heritage sites and tourist destinations. Located on the scenic Turrakana / Tasman Peninsula in the south east of Tasmania, it offers a unique and essential experience for all visitors to the area.
Wander convict-built grounds and gardens. (Image: Dearna Bond)

3. Launceston

You’ll find Launceston at the confluence of three rivers after an easy 2.5-hour drive from Hobart. Launceston is a patchwork of old and new. Here, heritage streetscapes meet modern architecture.

Visit Cataract Gorge, the green, sun-dappled heart of the town and sacred meeting point for Tasmania’s indigenous communities. Pull up at roadside produce stalls that dot the Tamar Valley, or dine out. Launceston is, after all, a UNESCO City of Gastronomy.

Should the local wine scene persuade you, simply extend your time in Launceston at Peppers Silo (but definitely at least stop by the onsite restaurant, Grain of the Silo , for a farm fresh menu) or Mercure Launceston before heading back to Hobart.

Walk the sunlit paths of Cataract Gorge. (Image: Nick H Visuals)

4. Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary

Take a 35-minute drive from your hotel and you’ll find Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary . This social enterprise is run by a team of extremely passionate Tasmanians with a mission to look after critically endangered species who have found sanctuary here after facing extinction on the mainland.

Choose to wander the sanctuary at your own pace or join a guided tour (free with your ticket) to come face to face with Tassie’s most iconic species. Tasmanian Devils, wombats and echidnas are part of the free tour. You can book up close encounters with your favourite animals, too.

Bonorong is a Sanctuary for wildlife run by a passionate team of like-minded people. We're a social enterprise: a little business with a big heart.
Snap a cuddle-worthy encounter. (Image: Tourism Australia)

5. Richmond Village & Coal River Valley

Richmond is a town that belongs in a snow globe. Fifty colonial-era, Georgian buildings have been painstakingly restored and turned into cafes, cosy restaurants and galleries. Visit Richmond Gaol , said to be the home of a prisoner so vile he inspired Charles Dickens to pen Oliver Twist’s Fagin.

Then, follow the Coal River as it flows past grassy, duckling-dotted knolls and under the iconic Richmond Bridge, the oldest bridge in Australia. From the crest of the bridge, see the oldest Catholic Church in Australia. The river crawls past many cellar doors, perfect for a day of wine tasting.

Richmond is a picture-perfect town in the Coal River Valley wine region, offering a glimpse into early colonial life, one of the best day trips from Hobart.
Trace the river through history and wine country. (Image: Fin Matson)

Plan your trip to Hobart and beyond with ALL Accor at All.com .