Cascade Brewery is a brewery established in 1824 in South Hobart, Tasmania and is the oldest continually operating brewery in Australia
Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens.
The gardens were established in 1818 and is the second oldest Botanical Gardens in Australia – the Sydney Botanic gardens were founded two years earlier. The land was originally occupied by the Muwinina people. Archaeological excavations have uncovered extensive shell middens and stone artifacts dating back more than 5000 years.
Anniversary Arch - Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens.
St David's Park is a formal English style walled park and dates from the beginning of European settlement in 1804. This was the site of the first burial ground in Tasmania, marked out by Lieutenant-Governor David Collins and the Reverend Robert Knopwood in April 1804.
Richmond - A country road
A Tree Failure on a Walking Trail - Mount Field National Park
Mount Field National Park, and the greater Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, is a large cultural landscape. Archaeological surveys have uncovered a number of Aboriginal heritage sites within Mount Field. Extensive surveys of the nearby Florentine Valley have shown Aboriginal occupation of over 35,000 years.
Mount Field is Tasmania's oldest national park, and is also one of the oldest reserves in Australia. The Russell Falls Reserve became the first reserve in Tasmania when it was first proclaimed in 1885.
Russell Falls is arguably Tasmania's prettiest waterfall; it's certainly Tasmania's most photographed.
The falls are in Mt Field National Park, part of Tasmania's World Heritage Wilderness Area, just over a 1-hr drive from Hobart. One of three falls that share the same watercourse, Russell Falls has a unique character and is the centrepiece of the park.
The UNESCO World Heritage-listed Port Arthur Historic Site, located 90 minutes’ drive from Hobart is Australia’s most intact and evocative convict site. On the edge of the Government Gardens, laneways and paths criss-cross the site.
The UNESCO World Heritage-listed Port Arthur Historic Site, located 90 minutes’ drive from Hobart is Australia’s most intact and evocative convict site. On the edge of the Government Gardens, laneways and paths criss-cross the site.