There are 11 caves in WA's South West
11 results
Take a stroll 27m down into Calgardup Cave’s magnificently decorated chambers.
Cave Point Lighthouse, located in the Torndirrup National Park in Western Australia, was built in 1976.
The Cave Works discovery centre is well worth a visit, as is Lake Cave, one of the deepest tourist caves in Leeuwin-Naturaliste National Park.
Caves Road is a 111-kilometre-long (69 mi) scenic route in the South West region of Western Australia. It connects western Busselton with Augusta, running along or to the west of the Leeuwin-Naturaliste ridge, and is an alternative route to Bussell Highway.
Adventure awaits as you descend into the park’s deepest cave.
Jewel Cave features the longest straw of any tourist cave in the world, a huge area of flowstone that resembles a karri forest, and a stalagmite weighing some 20 tonnes.
Welcome to Lake Cave Boranup, a stunning and pristine chamber located deep beneath the earth.
Mammoth Cave is extremely large with an astounding array of formations. During winter, a stream flows through it, creating reflections and giving the cave new life.
Welcome to Mammoth Cave, a stunning limestone cave located 21 km (13 mi) south of Margaret River, in the beautiful Leeuwin-Naturaliste National Park, about 300 km (190 mi) south of Perth.
Meekadarabee Falls were known to Aboriginal people as ‘the bathing place of the moon’ and there is a fascinating legend about the moss-covered waterfall and the small cave behind it.
Ngilgi Cave is a remarkable karst cave located in the southwest of Western Australia.