Castlemaine Diggings National Heritage Park

Photo: Mattinbgn / CC BY-SA 3.0

Step into the living history of Australia's gold rush at Castlemaine Diggings National Heritage Park, a sprawling 7,500-hectare landscape of quartz reefs, deep gullies, and remnant mining machinery that tells the story of the 1850s alluvial gold boom. Unlike a manicured museum, this park preserves the raw, unvarnished remains of a goldfields community: crumbling stone chimneys, rusted poppet heads, and the eerie silence of abandoned shafts. It's a place where you can literally walk the ground that fortune-seekers once fought over, with interpretive trails that bring the chaos and courage of the era to life.

Highlights & What to See

Suggested Time to Spend

Give yourself a full day to do justice to the park. Start at the Castlemaine Visitor Information Centre for a map and orientation, then spend the morning exploring the Specimen Gully Trail and Garfield Water Wheel. After a picnic lunch by the Loddon River, drive the Discovery Trail in the afternoon, stopping at Maldon for a beer at the Kangaroo Hotel (est. 1857). If you're a keen historian or gold-panner, consider an overnight stay in Castlemaine or Maldon to allow a second day for deeper exploration of the park's more remote corners.

Nearby Areas Worth Combining

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Note: opening hours, prices and booking requirements change often — please check official sources for current details.

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