Phillip Island Penguin Parade
Prices from $165 AUD
Every evening at dusk the Little Penguins come home from the sea at Phillip Island. Watch from an elevated boardwalk as they waddle cautiously from the beach to their burrows after a long day out at sea.
Features
- San Remo
- Phillip Island
- Informatuion Centre
- Penguin Parade
- Viewing Platform
More information...
Prices
Simply click the price below to add an item to your booking
Phillip Island Penguin Parade
|
afternoon/evening tour to view the Phillip Island Penguins
|
$165.00 | $125.00 | $125.00 |
|
One of the favourite Melbourne Day Tour spectacles is the Phillip Island Penguin Parade. Get yourself ready and join us in our Phillip Island Tour showcasing the world-famous Penguin Parade and Coastal Vistas. The main attraction has always been the Little Penguins doing their daily ritual of penguin parade. These little friends are the smallest of their kind in the world. But we’ll showcase more than just the penguins.
- Departs: 13:45pm (Oct to Mar) / 11:45am (Apr to Sep)
- Returns: 23:45pm (Oct to Mar) / 21:45pm (Apr to Sep)
- Duration: 9.5 hours
- World-class wildlife encounter
- Penguin Parade general viewing entry
- Koala Conservation Reserve entry
- Hosted by an experienced driver guide
- Selected Melbourne inner-city pick-up/drop-off points
- Koala Conservation Reserve: It is only a 1hr 45min drive from Melbourne directly to Phillip Island. Self-guided walk through Phillip Island’s Koala Conservation Reserve. Learn about Koalas, the history, and relevance of the Reserve, and the last area of natural woodland on the island.
- Explore Phillip Island: From the Koala Wildlife Park, it is a short drive to Phillip Island, a 10,000-hectare home to more than a hundred varieties of animal species. Phillip Island boasts a population of approximately 15,000 which is boosted during the busy tourist seasons. There are three main settlements Cape Woolamai, New Haven & Cowes.
- Cowes: Generally, we make time to wander through the coastal township of Cowes. Sheltered alongside the calm Westernport Bay this township was named after Cowes on the Isle of White. Beautiful coastal scenery, unique stores to peak into and many nice restaurants to purchase food.
- Phillip Island Nature Park: At the Phillip Island Nature Parks, the amazing scenery of sandy beaches, rugged cliffs, and exotic native wildlife is simply eye-catching. Phillip Island serves as a colony of and home to over 32,000 Little Penguins.
- Nobbies and Seal Rocks: Next, we arrive at the Nobbies Rocks where we take you on an optional guided walk down the boardwalks to see the rocky coast and spot Penguins nesting in their burrows.
- Phillip Island Penguin Parade: Next, we travel along backroads through Phillip Island Penguin Habitat. Enjoy incredible views of the coastal cliffs on your way to the Phillip Island Penguin Parade.
- Enjoy sunset at the Visitor Information Center and choose the right seat to have a great view of the main spectacles of the day — the Penguin Parade!
- The main attraction of the Phillip Island tours has always been the Little Penguins, who perform their daily ritual of penguin parades. These little friends are the smallest of their kind in the world. They’re also called “fairy penguins.” Measuring about 30 centimetres tall, the Little Penguins weighed just 1 kilogram, making them the smallest penguin species in the world. They have established colonies on the coastlines of Australia and New Zealand. You can also spot them in Tasmania and the Chatham Islands. These penguins are also called Blue Penguins due to the colour of their plumage — indigo-blue and a white stripe from the chin to the belly.
- Living in large colonies, the Little Penguins made Phillip Island one of their territories. On this Phillip Island tour, witness the Little Penguins appear magically from the surf to magically appear out of the surf to walk back to their homes. Crossing Summerland Beach they travel in small groups back to their burrows. And it happens every day at sunset. Right after the day’s hard work of fishing in the waters to bring food to their little ones left at home in the dunes.