GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #26 | Page 52

Back on the main track, it is about 19km to the start of the gypsum claypans. Heed the sign advising you to stay on the track: the crusty, salt surface of the birrida only appears to be hard and it doesn’t take much to get totally bogged here. Five kilometres on is the turn-off on the right to Harold Bight on the east of the peninsula. It is 6km to the campground. You can launch a boat from Harold Bight and it provides protection from the almost constant south-westerly winds. The next campground turn-off, 8km further, is South Gregories on the west side of the peninsula. Gregories is next and offers some very nice snorkelling just offshore. The Bottle Bay campground turn-off, another 4km on, is the closest to the tip of the peninsula and Skipjack Point. These three are worth the short side trips of around 500m each, but you’ll need low range 4WD. SKIPJACK POINT Just 1km on is the car park for Skipjack Point. A boardwalk weaves out to two stunning lookouts over the Shark Bay Marine Park, where you can stand for hours and view a mesmerising display of marine life on parade. To the south-east, the view sweeps back across the red cliffs leading to Herald Bight and to the west is a cove with the 3km return Wanamalu Trail, an interpretive walk to Cape Peron North. Cape Peron North can also be accessed by road, 1km from the car park for Skipjack Point. These waters beg you to come in, but beware two strong currents converge here, making it the only spot along the entire peninsula that isn’t safe for swimming. Diving and boating is permitted but spear fishing is not. So spend a few days here or as long as you can go with the supplies you have brought in (you can always scoot back to Denham for more, or over to the homestead for a spa). Skipjack Point. The final word on Francois Peron, and the entire Shark Bay area, is we wish we were there right now. READ FULL ARTICLE 52 \