This Trek starts at the junction of Useless Loop Road & Shark Bay Road. The nearest fuel is at Denham or the Overlander Roadhouse.
It's possible to drive out and back in a day to visit Steep Point to say you've stood on Australia's most western point in a day. There's even a sign, and a camera holder on a pole. However doing this is just ticking up a bucket list and means you miss out on one of the best beach camping locations in Australia. Why not make a camping holiday of your trip to Steep Point? This Trek shows you how.
Getting to Steep Point is a lot easier than it used to be now that it is managed by WA Parks & Wildlife. The track is well defined, there are more visitors, and there is a ranger on site when you get there to help with any queries or issues.
However, with that said, its not a trip for the unprepared. Firstly, you MUST have a high clearance 4WD and know how to drive it in soft sand. You must be prepared to lower tyre pressures and be fully self sufficient as this is a very remote area and there's no assistance or supplies once you leave Shark Bay.
You also have to book your camping before you make the trip. Camping is limited to designated sites and its often fully booked out well in advance of school holidays and peak periods. Make sure you can secure camping dates before heading off on this trip because it's a very long, full day's drive if you have to turn back and there's nowhere along the way to stop or stay enroute.
Avoid travelling overloaded and be conscious that you'll need to deflate tyre pressures a few times during the trip. Make sure you carry an air compressor so you can also reinflate on the return journey. The first deflation point should be at the transition of seal to unsealed road to ensure better vehicle handling, improved comfort, and safer travelling over the heavy corrugations that dominate this route all the way to the national park entrance. Once you reach the self-registration you should air down again in readiness for the very soft, and long steep hill climb on a narrow section of track as you first enter the dune field. This first hill catches out the unprepared. The recommended starting point is to deflate tyres to 20psi and if towing you should also deflate the trailer tyres. Once you enter this section you will not need to reinflate tyres until you exit the national park. So do it right first time and enjoy the trip with confidence. If you intend to load the Dirk Hartog Island barge, they prefer 15psi to ensure no one gets into trouble when reversing back up the beach off the ferry. With that said, once you have the appropriate tyre pressures the trip is easy going.
There are three main camping areas, one on the cliffs at Steep Point itself, and the main camp some 7km back called Shelter Bay and a third at False Entrance. Shelter Bay is the arguably the better area to camp with beautiful white sandy beaches looking out onto the protected waters of the South Passage looking over to Dirk Hartog Island. Many people bring small watercraft and launch directly off the beach, or those with larger boats motor over from Denham and make a mooring in the bay. Fishing, snorkelling, swimming and boating are all enjoyable ways to spend your time at Shelter Bay.
Steep Point itself is a headland at the mouth of South Passage and fronts the Indian Ocean and is very exposed to the roaring south westerly winds that dominate the WA coastline almost year round. It's a destination in itself to visit Steep Point and there is a sign to visit to mark the achievement of your journey here but being so exposed means it is a somewhat unpleasant area to stay too long unless your goal is to fish from the cliffs. The campsite area here is set lower down the headland where it is more protected but unlike Shelter Bay there is no sand, just hard limestone. The Steep Point camping area is certainly more convenient for those that wish to fish from the cliff as it saves driving but from a camping perspective, Shelter Bay is by far the better choice.
Consider the effort of getting to Steep Point when you make your campsite bookings and if dates don't line up consider moving sites to extend your stay. You'll want a minimum of 2 nights but even this won't be enough to see all there is here. Return visitors aim to book for much longer because there's plenty to do here and it's arguable one of the best 4WD camping destinations in Australia.
There is camping area at Steep Point itself but this does not offer sandy beach camping like at Shelter Bay but faces the South Passage. It's a magnificent outlook but is not beach camping. It's not a bad option if its all you can book, but unless you specifically want to spend your time balloon fishing from the cliffs at Steep Point or are happy to drive each day to look around then you're probably better off booking at Shelter Bay where you can sit back and relax. This enormous area has camping room for everyone, even when fully booked you will have space to yourself.
To reach Steep Point you'll take a sandy track that follows the eastern side of the peninsula. Steep Point gives the traveller the opportunity to see a pristine environment and enjoy superb ocean vistas from beaches, bays and high cliff tops. Views from Cloughs Bar to Steep Point include secluded bays, salt pans or birradas, scrub covered dunes, glimpses of Dirk Hartog Island and across the bay to the Peron Peninsula. If you are keen to fish, there are plenty of opportunities to catch a big fish from the beach or the rocks.
On the western side of the Steep Point area are the Zuytdorp Cliffs (pronounced Zurtoff). The Indian Ocean smashes against these cliffs some 170m above the waterline and provides sightseers with fantastic photography opportunities at almost every turn. On the eastern side (Shark Bay side) are numerous sandy beaches, where one can see fish swimming in the shallows or rock pools. From a fishing point of view, Steep Point itself, is arguably the best rock fishing platform in Australia, with the main catch being mackerel and snapper.
How to Use this Trek Note
- To download this information and the route file for offline use on a phone, tablet, headunit or laptop, go to the app store and purchase ExplorOz Traveller. This app enables offline navigation and mapping and will show where you are as you travel along the route. For more info see the ExplorOz Traveller webpage and the EOTopo webpage.
Environment
The terrain of Edel Land/
Steep Point is rugged
sand dune country and in
places is very sandy. In
places tracks are overgrown and vehicle scratching is to be expected.
From
Shelter Bay the sandy tracks make way to rocky
limestone as you climb the headland to
Steep Point. From here you can pick up a
cliff-top trail called the Zurtydorph Track that gently meanders south along the top of the cliffs with spectacular
views the entire way down to
Thunder Bay and beyond.
Along this route you'll find some bays and tracks to blow holes. Take care, these are dangerous and unpatrolled
places.
History
Evidence of aboriginal occupation has been found in this region going back to around 30,000 years. It is the traditional lands of the Malgana people. Tools were created using stone from a natural quarry at
Crayfish Bay. Fresh water was sourced from Willyah Mia, on the eastern shore of the peninsula and fish was plentiful.
The earliest European exploration of the region was by the Dutch explorer Dirk Hartog in 1616. Hartog landed on the nearby island, now named Dirk Hartog Island. Hartog was the first recorded European to land on the western coastline of Australia and he was followed by many others including de Vlamingh in 1697 who was a Dutch seafarer that named the headland 'Steyle Hock' (
Steep Point) when anchored off the cliffs near the southern tip of Dirk Hartog Island. William
Dampier named
Shark Bay in 1699; St. Alouaran visited in 1772, Baudin in 1801 and 1803, De Freycinet in 1818, King in 1822,
Grey in 1839 and
Denham in 1858.
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