Home / City Guides / Top must-do things when in Boolambayte, Australia

Top must-do things when in Boolambayte, Australia

Boolambayte is a small New South Wales rural location in the Mid-Coast, located about 190kms Sydney.


Hide Map

Boolambayte is a small New South Wales rural location in the Mid-Coast, located about 190kms from the capital Sydney covering an area of ​​89,891 square kilometers. Boolambayte has a registered population of 87 and is located within the Australian Eastern Time Zone of Australia / Sydney.


1. Myall Lakes National Park

Myall Lakes National Park
Myall Lakes National Park

Myall Lakes National Park is a national park located in New South Wales, Australia, 236 kilometers north of Sydney. It encompasses one of the state’s largest coastal lake systems Myall Lakes and includes Broughton Island. The park includes 40 kilometers of beaches and rolling sand dunes.


2. Sugarloaf Point Lighthouse

Sugarloaf Point Lighthouse
Sugarloaf Point Lighthouse

Sugarloaf Point Light, also known as Seal Rocks Lighthouse, is an active lighthouse located on Sugarloaf Point, a point about 3 kilometers southeast of Seal Rocks, New South Wales, Australia. It guards Seal Rocks, a treacherous rock formation to the south. It is the first lighthouse designed by James Barnet. It is also one of only two towers in Australia with an external stairway.


3. Myall River

Myall River
Myall River

Myall River, an open semi-mature brackish freshwater barrier estuary of the Mid-Coast Council system, is located in the Mid North Coast region of New South Wales, Australia. 


4. Smiths Lake

Smiths Lake
Smiths Lake

Smiths Lake, an intermittently closed youthful saline coastal lagoon, is located within the Mid-Coast Council local government area in the Mid North Coast region of New South Wales, Australia. Smiths Lake is located adjacent to the village of Smiths Lake, and adjacent to the east coast, about 274 kilometers north of Sydney.


5. Bulahdelah Mountain

Bulahdelah Mountain
Bulahdelah Mountain

Bulahdelah Mountain, or Alum Mountain, as it is also known, is an imposing set of rocky tors that overlook the township of Bulahdelah and the Myall River Valley. A wide range of animals and plants can be seen amid the picturesque boulders, including a spectacular range of orchids. The mountain has been set aside as a forest park by the State Forests of New South Wales for its historical, recreational and natural significance.