The Wheatbelt is calling: silo art, salt lakes, and a wave rock awaits

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A fertile farming region of red soils, salt lakes and golden crops is having a moment of cultural revival, and the result is a renewed focus inspired by people, place and history.

Waking up at Farmers Home Hotel, ensconced in premium linens and the warmth of a sound hotel sleep, one could be almost anywhere. Except, that is, for the distinct sense of place that peers into bleary-eyed view: the small portion of exposed original red brick that dates this grand old building back to 1866; the glimmering eucalyptus treetops that blow gently in the breeze outside; the fresh country air that comes in through the window, bringing welcome news of overnight rain on thirsty Wheatbelt soils. This thoughtfully renovated property, with its boutique luxury styling and modern comforts, is inspired by the best hotels you might’ve stayed anywhere in the world, but it is firmly rooted in the local and takes every opportunity to remind you where you are.

As embodied by the offering at Farmers Home Hotel, which is the follow-up to hotelier and Dôme Group CEO Nigel Oakey’s Premier Mill Hotel in Katanning, Northam is one of the places where it is most obvious that the Wheatbelt – a sometimes overlooked region for tourists seeking a particular level of comfort or quality – is entering an exciting new phase, inspired by people, place and local stories.

The Farmers Home Hotel, Golden Outback, Western Australia
The Farmers Home Hotel occupies a building that’s been a part of Northam’s streetscape since the early 1800s. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

The Wheatbelt town of Northam

This Golden Outback town of some 11,000 people sits at the confluence of two meandering rivers, the Avon and the Mortlock and, at just two hours’ drive from Perth, it is both the gateway to the Goldfields and a founding hub of the central and eastern Wheatbelt. Northam is the heart of the first inland district that was opened up for wheat farming in the mid-to-late-1800s, the Victoria Plains. The town benefited from its location along the east-west rail line that serviced the goldfields, with the gold rush of the 1890s funding the first major expansion of the Wheatbelt. The many histories of the area intersect here, those of missionaries, bushrangers, surveyors, farmers, governors, teetotallers, engineers and prospectors, as well as that of the Ballardong Nyoongar people, the area’s Traditional Owners, whose resilience in the face of colonisation is the most definitive and enduring story of all.

These intertwining histories can be followed as they lace through the Wheatbelt. Attractions such as the Golden Pipeline, which runs from Perth’s Mundaring Weir through Meckering, Cunderdin, Tammin, Kellerberrin, Merredin, Westonia and Southern Cross out to Kalgoorlie, provide both a road map and an evocative narrative through which to experience the area from many different perspectives. But such stories are also giving rise to new interpretations that make for richer cultural experiences of place.

Aerial shot of Baladjie Rock, Golden Outback, Australia
Climbing Baladjie Rock affords stunning views. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

The Public Silo Trail

The Public Silo Trail, an initiative of Perth-based not-for-profit arts organisation FORM, is just one example. In Northam, international artists Phlegm and Hense were commissioned to paint 10 murals on the 38-metre-tall silos at the working CBH grain terminal. FORM has also commissioned public art for the town’s working flour mill – Amok Island’s The Last Swans, which pays tribute to the only white swans living in the wild in Australia, and their home on the banks of the Avon – and a laneway wall off its main street. These works, inspired by local stories uncovered through significant community consultation, have proven to be a hit.

Form CEO Tabitha McMullen says these cultural initiatives provide opportunities for the expression of local identities in regional Western Australia. “Cultural life is such an important part of wellbeing, and regional Western Australia has so many stories to tell," she says. “We are having ongoing conversations across Western Australia, including in the Wheatbelt, about what cultural tourism experiences we can grow and support, so that locals can feel a sense of pride in their community and they can share their cultural identity with visitors. People within Western Australia can go and visit and experience those stories and places, and of course we can bring international visitors."

The Public Silo Trail, The Golden Outback, Western Australia
The public Silo Trail has transformed pockets of the Golden Outback into an open-air gallery.
(Image: Tourism Western Australia)

The allure of seeing the Wheatbelt from above

I’m sitting in the Dôme Cafe on the ground floor of the hotel as an eager flock of tourists arrive. It’s a foggy morning, and misty white clouds linger on the curves of the rolling hills outside. The travellers are rugged up: puffer jackets, scarves, beanies. They are getting coffee before a morning hot-air balloon sojourn – a popular offering for which Northam is well known. For a couple of friendly locals seated near me, the group’s entrance signals a reminder the morning is getting on; they take it as their cue to leave and, as they go, they smile to the out-of-towners and promise the clouds will clear ahead of their airborne adventure. I’m not here for a balloon ride, but I do understand the desire to see things from the air. In this place where the horizon always seems to escape you, where the skies are so open and vast and the land so sprawling and uninterrupted you can never fully grasp its extent. it makes sense to want to take it all in from above.

Hot air balloon over Northam, Western Australia
Enjoy a hot-air balloon ride over the buttery-hued canola fields near Northam.

I grew up on a farm just outside the small town of Kondinin, about two hours south-east of Northam. It is surrounded by a lake system. Lakes and water, perhaps strangely for a place often struggling under drought, dominate much of my childhood memory. I remember days spent building rafts from old 40-gallon steel drums and corrugated tin when the lakes were full. My brother and I, and endless visiting friends, would “sail" them out on the lakes that, back then, felt so big.

A few years ago, my brother and I started noticing local tourism organisations posting drone photos of salt lakes on Instagram. It was like our secret little spots, so laden with intrigue and the potential for adventure to the young imagination, were hitting the big time. People from the city, and from interstate and overseas, were seeing these incredible images of brightly coloured, sometimes interconnecting circles and wanting to experience this magical landscape for themselves.

Wave Rock, Golden Outback, WA
Wave Rock is the giant granite formation that looks set to crash onto the bush below. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

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Photographing the Wheatbelt from above

One city dweller who has been drawn to the image of the Wheatbelt from above is Paul Eaton, a drone photographer whose shots frequently end up on the Instagram feeds of the likes of Golden Outback and Pathways to Wave Rock. Eaton’s love of the Wheatbelt started when he was travelling with his young family to Lake Ballard, near Menzies (the site of Antony Gormley’s haunting sculptures), making stops along the way. “We found all these cool little spots," he says. Since then, he’s made frequent trips, using trails recommended by local tourism bodies as guides for his explorations and seeking out new spots by looking on Google Maps as his partner drives. “We just take random detours. There are times we wonder where we’ll end up, but it’s all part of the adventure."

Antony Gormley’s sculptures at Lake Ballard, Western Australia
See a ground-level view of Antony Gormley’s sculptures at Lake Ballard, near Menzies. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

When he first started posting his photos of rural areas, Eaton says the response was exciting. “People see it and they go, ‘Where’s that?’ " He’s passionate about encouraging people to visit the region, and spend money in small country towns. “We’ve got to get people heading east, and if I can be part of that, I’m pretty happy."

The region’s hidden gems

This growing interest is something Sheenagh Collins, a lifelong local of the town of Hyden, has seen firsthand. She is the general manager of the Wave Rock Hotel and owner of the Wave Rock Resort, the latter located on her family farm, first established by her great grandfather in 1924 and still run by her 89-year-old mother Valerie Mouritz. Collins started at the hotel as a waitress on 7 January, 1977, and has been such a mainstay of tourism in the Wheatbelt since that she’s been dubbed a tourist attraction in her own right, hosting farm tours, regaling visitors with endless stories and generally putting Wave Rock, known as Katter Kich to the local First Nations peoples, firmly on the map.

Eaglestone Rock, Golden Outback, Western Australia
Eaglestone Rock is a spectacular granite rock and cave formation. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

“We’ve been pioneering tourism in that time," Collins says. “When I started out, the new part of the hotel had just been built. Hyden originally didn’t even have a hotel, locals used to drink beer hot off the train. We’ve really built it all from nothing."

The lakes have always been a point of interest, she says. “People who live in the city have never seen anything like the beauty of the salt lakes, and their vastness. People are cooped up in cities; to come out and run across a dry salt lake, and take photos jumping in the air, I think the freedom of that is what attracts them."

Aerial shot of Lake Magic, Western Australia
Witness the changing colours of Lake Magic at Wave Rock Resort, from a melted pool of buttery yellow to Granny Smith green. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

Yet, when Collins and her late husband, former AFL player Denis Collins, built a salt bath next to Lake Magic on their property, complete with limestone walls for safe entry (and more recently wooden bungalows for shade), they weren’t expecting it to be such a hit. “People started coming in droves," Collins says. On social media, the salt bath promises a luxurious getaway that is only made more appealing by its otherwise no-frills surrounds. Such is the charm of the Wheatbelt.

An aerial view of Lake Magic, near Hyden, Western Australia
An aerial view of Lake Magic, near Hyden. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

A place of stories

Back up near Northam, the neighbouring town of York offers this same charm in abundance. At Gather York, a small cafe in the town’s old flour mill, which also sells artisan sauces, pasta and ceramics, I enjoy a chai latte and handmade sausage roll while an elderly farmer asks me where I’ve come from and how much rain there’s been there. In the same building there’s an antique collective, run by a number of local makers and collectors who all store and sell their wares here. Woodworker John Boekhout greets me and explains how the space works, showing me his hand-carved spoons (three of which I buy) and offering a few tips on places to visit.

It is precisely these kinds of interactions that make the Wheatbelt what it is: a place of many stories, and enormous evocative potential that is now being captured and expressed more than ever through images, art, culture and boutique experiences. Whether it’s the epic or the everyday that entices, the Wheatbelt is calling. The places we already know, like Wave Rock and the mesmerising salt lakes, are just entry points into an intricate and ancient landscape that invites you to spend time being, and to make your own adventure.

Gone are the days where the Wheatbelt region relied on the gimmicky, if endearing, details of its rural and agricultural identity to lure visitors. It is now embracing the more multidimensional identity that I’ve always known was here. The result for those who visit is a richer cultural experience that makes life a lot more interesting for locals as well.

Gather York, Store in The Golden Outback, WA, Australia
Gather York is a local cafe and purveyor of specialty groceries.

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The Wheatbelt’s best rock sites

While Wave Rock (Katter Kich) has become a signature sight when traversing the golden expanses of the Wheatbelt, the landscape of the region is scattered with granite outcrops and monoliths that are equally captivating but still fly under the (Instagram) radar. Many can be added to self-drive explorations of the region, creating a giant join-the-dot puzzle.

Elachbutting Rock

Located 100 kilometres north-east of Westonia, Elachbutting Rock, which is thought to mean ‘that thing standing’ in the language of the local First Nations peoples, is a wave-like granite formation similar to Wave Rock but that also boasts Monty’s Pass, a 30-metre tunnel caused by a rock slide.

Elachbutting Rock, near Westonia, WA
Elachbutting Rock, near Westonia. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

Baladjie Rock

Baladjie Rock, which sits on the southern edge of the equally fascinating Baladjie salt-lake system, north-east of Westonia, is punctuated by caves, overhangs and fractures; climbing to its summit affords stunning views of the surrounding salt lakes.

Beringbooding Rock

Beringbooding Rock overlooks the largest rock water catchment tank in Australia, built in 1937 and holding 2.25 million gallons, and offers up a gravity-defying balancing boulder, a huge gnamma hole (a natural rock cavity that acts as a water tank) and rock art by the local Kalamaia peoples.

Baladjie Reserve, near Westonia, Golden Outback, WA, Australia
The ethereal expanse of Baladjie Reserve, near Westonia, from above. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

Eaglestone Rock

Eaglestone Rock, 20 kilometres north-east of Nungarin, is a granite rock and cave formation abutting Lake Brown where wedge-tailed eagles wheel overhead and time can be spent rock climbing and picnicking.

Jilakin Rock

Making the easy ascent of the sprawling monolith of Jilakin Rock, 20 kilometres east of Kulin, provides infinite views over the pearly white expanse of Jilakin Lake, the ephemeral salt lake at its edges.

Landscape views of Eaglestone Rock, Western Australia
Eaglestone Rock dominates the landscape. (Image: Tourism Westen Australia)

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Exploring an icon: inside the massive upgrade to Broome’s famous Cable Beach

(Credit: Tourism WA)

    Lucy Cousins Lucy Cousins
    With unhurried mornings, long, sun-filled afternoons, evenings shaped around sunset, this iconic beach offers an all-day experience (and it’s about to get even better).

    As the sun slowly rises over the languid waves and fine sand of Broome’s Cable Beach, the morning colours shift from rich apricot to pale gold and frosty pearl. Remnants of life reveal themselves in the subtle shadows – crab claw marks, towel impressions, footprints. Life here is unhurried, but don’t be fooled. This town is continually shifting like the desert dunes that surround it.

    And with a $75 million upgrade – offering easier and more inclusive access for people of all abilities – it’s getting even better.

    Cable Beach upgrade foreshore redevelopment stage 1
    Discover the Cable Beach redevelopment.

    The addition of comfortable and welcoming spaces has begun (and will continue). This means visitors will be able to spend longer enjoying this beautiful environment, while knowing that the upgrade will create a more environmentally protected setting that preserves the natural character visitors come for. Come sunset, soak it in all the better thanks to the already improved foreshore areas, made for lingering while the light changes. And for the kids, a new splash park and accessible dry playground will make it easy to while away the hours.

    Think you know what a day at this beach is like? Think again.

    Morning colours

    car on cable beach at sunrise
    Cable Beach comes alive after sunrise. (Credit: Tourism WA)

    As the sun colours the sky, Cable Beach shows signs of life (and not just the aquatic kind). Locals and visitors alike float in the cool water as it laps the shore, landlubbers explore the coast on foot, runners pace and beachside yoga classes bring quiet movement to the day.

    When the sky is blue and the sun is firmly in position, head down to the well-known Cable Beach House for a long, slow breakfast overlooking the ocean. Think fresh tropical fruit, eggs cooked your way and strong coffee in the warm morning breeze.

    Afternoon adventures

    camel train on cable beach in broome at sunset
    Join a camel train at sunset. (Credit: C J Maddock)

    When you’re ready to explore, carve a path along the Minyirr Park Trail – a gentle 1.5-2km track through coastal bushland with spectacular views of the dunes. Refuel at the nearby Spinifex Brewery for lunch with its low-key, outdoor beer garden. There’s even an outdoor playground if you’re travelling with young humans.

    Walk off your lazy lunch by watching (or joining) one of the beach soccer or volleyball games, or even try Silent Beats Broome – a silent walking disco through the dunes. Or book a spot on the famous camel trains, watching the sun drop below the horizon along the way. They’re a constant reminder of the fascinating history, landscape and cultural mix in this part of the country.

    Evening degustation

    server at Cable Beach Club
    Stop into the Cable Beach Club. (Credit: Tourism WA)

    As the day closes, watch the world-famous Cable Beach sunset from the appropriately named Sunset Grill at Cable Beach Club. This open-air terraced dining spot overlooking the beach is the kind of place where the view takes centre stage.

    While you sip on a lychee, lime & lemonade mocktail or a local beer, enjoy the bustle of life and nature outside as the day comes to an end.

    For dinner, nab a table at the Bali Hai Cafe, where they offer pan-fried crispy barramundi, Abrolhos Island scallops and deep-sea snow crab. When you’re ready for bed, check in to Pinctada Hotel Broome – a lush, tropical resort with palm-dotted gardens and a large, lagoon-style pool to cool off in.

    Beyond the beach

    Beyond the wide, open beach and never-ending sky of Cable Beach, there are many more reasons to visit North West Australia. These are just a few.

    Unmatched experiences

    Shinju Matsuri Festival's popular Long Table Dinner on cable beach
    Join Shinju Matsuri Festival’s popular Long Table Dinner. (Credit: Tourism WA)

    Engage with the history of the land and its people on an Indigenous cultural tour exploring everything from the local wildlife to the tastes of bush tucker. To understand the importance of pearling to this town, take a tour of Chinatown, or head outside of town to the live pearl harvests at Willie Creek or Cygnet Bay Pearl Farm, one of Australia’s oldest pearl farms.

    Learn why Japanese pearlers were central to Broome’s pearling success and visit the largest Japanese cemetery in Australia, where 900 Japanese pearlers were buried – a testament to the risks and rewards of this dangerous profession.

    And book ahead every spring for when communal tables, freshly cooked local fare and festoon lighting fill the beach for the extremely popular Long Table Dinner on Cable Beach. It’s a highlight of the Shinju Matsuri Festival, along with the Floating Lanterns Matsuri, where you can personalise a lantern and gently release it into the sea to honour those you love.

    Dining discoveries

    Matso’s Broome Brewery
    Settle in for Matso’s famous ginger or mango beer. (Credit: Tourism WA)

    Further your culinary adventure at the laid-back Sunday Sesh at Matso’s Broome Brewery. Chow down on smoked crocodile or Aussie barramundi while kicking back to a local DJ as the heat of the day fades.

    For more tunes, the beautiful outdoor Bay Club at the Mangrove Hotel is a great choice for dinner with live music, DJs or an event that stretches on into the early hours. Still hungry? Pop by Johnny Sausage for Italian-influenced meals paired with impeccable wines.

    Natural beauties

    Gantheaume Point cabnle beach broome
    Experience the striking colours of Gantheaume Point. (Credit: Tourism WA)

    Avoid the crowds and head to Town Beach for a quieter vantage point to see the phenomenal Staircase to the Moon – a natural illusion where the rising full moon is reflected on the tidal flats, creating a shimmering ‘staircase’ stretching up to the sky.

    Just south of Cable Beach are the deep red cliffs and dramatic ocean views of Gantheaume Point, where 130-million-year-old dinosaur footprints can be seen, revealed at low tide. Or head to Roebuck Bay to visit the internationally significant wetlands, where vast tidal flats are home to shorebirds and coastal fauna.

    Between October and March, watch turtles nesting and hatchlings emerge from the sand. You’ll be holding your breath as they make their way down to the shoreline, ready to start their life in one of Australia’s most beautiful landscapes.

    For more on Cable Beach and Australia’s North West, visit australiasnorthwest.com.