Photo: Zoharby / CC BY-SA 3.0
Perched on the edge of the George Gill Range, Kings Creek Station is a working cattle station turned outback lodging that feels like a genuine slice of the Red Centre. With its iconic red dirt, star-filled night skies, and close proximity to Kings Canyon, it’s an ideal base for exploring Watarrka National Park. The station offers a range of accommodation from safari tents to campgrounds, and its on-site restaurant serves hearty Aussie fare with a view.
Highlights & What to See
- Kings Canyon Rim Walk: The station is the closest lodging to this epic 6km loop, which takes you up to the canyon rim for jaw-dropping views of the 100m-high sandstone walls and the ‘Garden of Eden’ waterhole.
- Quad Bike Adventures: Join a guided tour across the station’s 1,800 square kilometres, riding through dry creek beds and spinifex plains with the chance to spot red kangaroos and dingoes.
- Helicopter Flights: See the George Gill Range and Kings Canyon from the air – a spectacular way to grasp the scale of the landscape.
- Station Life Tours: Get a behind-the-scenes look at how a working cattle station operates in the harsh outback, including mustering demonstrations and a visit to the stockyards.
- Stargazing: With minimal light pollution, the night sky here is phenomenal. The station often sets up telescopes for guided astronomy sessions.
Suggested Time to Spend
Most travellers stay two nights, which allows one full day for the Kings Canyon Rim Walk (start early to beat the heat) and another for a quad bike tour or helicopter flight. If you’re short on time, a single night is enough to do the rim walk and enjoy a sunset drink at the station’s bar. The site is also a popular stop on the Red Centre Way from Alice Springs to Uluru, so many self-drivers break the journey here for a night.
Nearby Areas Worth Combining
- Watarrka National Park (Kings Canyon): Just 10 minutes’ drive away, this park is the main draw – don’t miss the less-crowded Kathleen Springs Walk for a gentler canyon experience.
- Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park: About 3.5 hours’ drive southwest, the iconic monolith and domes are a natural extension of any Red Centre itinerary.
- Alice Springs: 3 hours northeast, this outback hub offers the Alice Springs Desert Park and the historic Telegraph Station – a good start or end point for your trip.
- West MacDonnell Ranges: En route to or from Alice Springs, stop at Ormiston Gorge and Glen Helen Gorge for swimming holes and short walks.
- Finke Gorge National Park: About 2.5 hours east, home to the ancient Palm Valley with its rare red cabbage palms – a 4WD adventure.
Please check official sources for current details.
Note: opening hours, prices and booking requirements change often — please check official sources for current details.
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Image credits
- Watarrka National Park (Kings Canyon) — Jorge Lascar / CC BY 2.0
- Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park — Tourism NT / Attribution
- Alice Springs — Bahnfrend / CC BY-SA 4.0
- West MacDonnell Ranges — Hesperian / CC BY-SA 3.0
- Red Centre Way — DaHuzyBru / CC BY-SA 4.0