The 12 Apostles Lodge Walk is a 4-day exclusive guided walk that explores 55km of the Great Ocean Walk. Heading west from Castle Cove to the Twelve Apostles, the undulating terrain allows you to explore beaches, rock clifftop and open forested areas with views of the famed Apostles that remain. Conclude with an unforgettable helicopter flight over the Apostles. Each evening, retreat to the haven that is The 12 Apostles Lodge where the in-house chef will prepare a delicious dinner for you.
Daily Itinerary
Day 1
Details for Today
Walk: Today’s walk: Castle Cove to Johanna Beach (6.5km), optional walk back to the lodge (3km)
Accommodation: 12 Apostles Lodge
Meals: L, D
Today’s walk: Castle Cove to Johanna Beach (6.5km), optional walk back to the lodge (3km)
Time to lace up in the ‘mud room’ and step out on track for day one. This is not before a lodge welcome and walk briefing over morning tea. It’s then a short drive out to Castle Cove to begin your walk, with a tasty hiker lunch tucked in your pack.
Today begins in the tea-trees with a few impromptu peeks out to the Southern Ocean. This will be your constant neighbour for the next four days. Enter a flawlessly-groomed grass tree forest and hear tales dating back 104 million years at Dinosaur Cove. Bring those boots to a halt and consider a time when dinosaurs occupied your very location.
Next, drop down onto Johanna Beach. This is an opportunity to kick off the boots and walk barefoot; wind-swept waves just metres away. This two kilometre stretch has a knack of clearing busy minds and washing away city stresses. Take your own pace across sands frequented by hooded plovers.
At the end of the beach is your cool water and lemonade greeting, a constant across all four days. Hop in the van or choose to walk back to the lodge under your own steam.
Walking time: 4 hours
Day 2
Details for Today
Walk: Milanesia Gate to Moonlight Head (12.5km), optional morning walk (8km)
Accommodation: 12 Apostles Lodge
Today’s walk: Milanesia Gate to Moonlight Head (12.5km), optional morning walk (8km)
Challenge delivers great reward. Wild, weathered headlands give sense you’re at the world’s edge. Day two is your hardest day out on track. But with it comes spectacular seascapes and personal triumph. Beginning at Milanesia Gate, it covers some of the most remote sections of the Great Ocean Walk. This is your day of wild. Your day of rugged. Strap that pack on tightly and don’t be afraid to put your head down and march up those hills.
The ocean is your steadfast companion across 12.5 kilometres of rolling terrain today, beginning with a descent onto Milanesia Beach. Here, your guide will point out a ‘natural rock wall’ that would be the envy of any budding young climber. After a fleeting beach visit, it’s a short but bracing climb that whispers of inclines to come.
Over the next hours, your trail carves its way through deep gullies with tree ferns and towering remnant Eucalypts. There’s 132 steps to ascend before trailing west out of the forest to Ryans Den. On suitable days, this is your lunch perch. The Den gifts with unsurpassed views across to Cape Volney and Cape Otway.
Further along the trail, as it mimics the tumbles and rising of the coastline, keep an eye out for Cape Volney. There’s a bench that, if time allowed, could swallow hours. Heaving seas disappear into watery caves. Views west travel to the horizon’s edge. And the entire spectacle is framed by the forest.
Participate in this optional walk first thing in the morning: Begin bright and early on Johanna Beach. Keep an eye out for kangaroos as you traverse rolling hills, including a country lane that rises to the Great Ocean Walk’s highest point. Today’s endurance option is for those who have done some additional training.
Walking time: 8 hours
Day 3
Details for Today
Walk: Moonlight Head to Princetown (12.5km), optional early morning walk (4.5km)
Accommodation: 12 Apostles Lodge
Meals: B, L, D
Today’s walk: Moonlight Head to Princetown (12.5km), optional early morning walk (4.5km)
Today is about shipwrecks, sandy pathways, exposed heathland and maybe even first glimpse of the Apostles. What better place to commence the walk and get your bearings than The Gables Lookout, one of Australia’s highest cliff-top vistas. After the challenging undulations of yesterday, day three is pleasantly less furrowed.
More than 300 ships have come to grief on this stretch of coastline. Your first stop is aptly named Wreck Beach. It’s a suitable reminder of those early days and treacherous ocean voyages. If conditions allow, you’ll drop down to Wreck Beach and hear tales of pillaging and misfortune including a ship which travelled from China whose cargo of tea coloured the ocean. Depending on tide, an alternate route leads through to Devils Kitchen, home to arguably Australia’s best lavatory vista!
Following lunch, notice how the geology begins to change from sandstone to limestone. Thick Eucalypt forest gives way to sections of moonscape, indicators of what’s in store. Keep an eye out for native rosemary, cushion plants and wild flowers in season.
Your first glimpse of the Gellibrand River marks the entrance to Port Campbell National Park. This freshwater river near the sleepy hamlet of Princetown is an easy downhill stroll. After some 12.5 kilometres, reward yourself with a cooling river dip.
Participate in this optional walk first thing in the morning: Set off early, gently winding through native stringy bark forest before meeting the others at The Gables Lookout. Alternately, relax on the bus and explore an early 1900s cemetery at Moonlight Head.
Walking time: 7 hours
Day 4
Details for Today
Walk: Princetown to the Twelve Apostles (8km)
Meals: B, L
Today’s walk: Princetown to the Twelve Apostles (8km)
Today invites new heights. Not only will you conquer the final steps of your Great Ocean Walk but top this with a 15-minute helicopter flight. Depart from the quiet shores of Princetown by the Gellibrand River, beginning with an easy 30 minute wander to reveal your first full view of the Apostles. Gasps aside, keep an eye out for two resident mobs of kangaroos across the hillsides to your right.
There’s a sense of elation today as you draw nearer to the mighty limestone Apostles. No, there’s not 12, which may come as no surprise. But amongst the proudly standing 7, lie 5 recently discovered apostles beneath the ocean’s surface. Weathered but not beaten, those in view lose a couple of centimetres each year to the perilous swells and winds whipping up from the Southern Ocean.
Drawing closer, hear the romantic tale of Tom and Eva. Tom, a gallant local who swam more than an hour to rescue Eva from the Loch Ard, perhaps Victoria’s best known shipwreck. Of 63 on board, Eva was one of the lucky two to survive, whisked to a cave by Tom and ‘administered’ brandy to remain conscious.
The Apostles reveal gradually along this stretch, reappearing as the trail rises. There’s a viewing platform exclusive to walkers on the final stretch before your arrival to the Visitor Centre. It’s the official end to your walk and an appropriate locale to get cosy with the Apostles in a group snap.
If conditions permit, don’t miss the opportunity to descend 80-plus steps to the beach below. This final perspective gives a sense of the Apostles brooding heights, one 73-metres tall, nudging the equivalent of a 20-storey building. It’s here with sand under your boots, a sense of monumental achievement and wonder sets in.
Take to the skies to bid farewell with a 15-minute helicopter flight. Capturing the chiselled coastline from above gives scale not only to the Apostles but the trek you’ve completed. Follow this with a final lunch in the sleepy fishing town of Port Campbell before returning to Melbourne.
Walking time: 3 hours
Accommodation
The 12 Apostles Lodge is a forest-hugged refuge three hours from Melbourne. This is where the foot spa awaits, rainforest showers, kitchen garden, dining room stocked with local wines, and your king bedroom with spacious en suite.
The architecturally-designed lodge has been crafted with environmental sensitivity in mind. This translates to passive solar design, hydronic heating, low consumption electric and water fittings, on-site wastewater treatment and composting, plus a self-sufficient water supply. And there’s reason this eco-development is award-winning, delivering modern comforts with equal rigour.
The dining room has a lounge area well-suited for canapes when the fire pit isn’t crackling with friend-huddling flames. After a glass of regional red, move to the long table for your nightly two-course regional menu.
Onsite you’ll also find 24-hour tea and coffee facilities, gear drying room, daily newspapers and a lodge library well stocked with magazines, reference and fictional books or ask about the lodge property walks. You’re not alone if you don’t stray far from the foot spa and dining table though!