Echo Point Jetty, rocks, water, peak, ferry, Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park
Echo Point Jetty, Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park (photograph: Dan Broun)
60 Great Short Walks

Echo Point

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3-4 hours one way, 11km, 20 mins by ferry (fee applies) and then walk one way to Cynthia Bay.
Grade 3: Some bushwalking experience recommended. Tracks may have short steep hill sections, a rough surface and many steps.
Supervise children. Tracks are subject to severe weather conditions—weather may change quickly. Tracks are difficult to navigate when covered in snow and may be impassable.
A valid parks pass is required for entry to Tasmania's national parks.
Take the Lyell Highway (A10) to Derwent Bridge. At Derwent Bridge turn onto Lake St Clair Road (C193) and continue to the visitor centre at Cynthia Bay.

About

​​Three-quarters of the way up Lake St Clair, in a dense and mossy forest, is the tiny Echo Point walkers’ hut. A small jetty allows you to walk one way and catch a ferry the other (bookings essential). The walk is 11km one way, close to the lake​ shore, and mostly through rainforest. Across the lake is the sharp peak of Mount Ida, a vestige left by glaciers that travelled either side of the peak. Those powerful glaciers also excavated the hollow now filled by Lake St Clair.