The Alps National Park extends from the center of Gippsland to the border of New South Wales State, next to Kosciuszko National Park. This park has some of the most beautiful Alpine landscapes in Australia, including mountain peaks, cliffs, plains of meadows.
Jungle trekking Many opportunities are out there, from the hikes to the Victoria Falls - Mount Feather Mountain, Mount Bogong and Mount Howitt Mountain Peak - Snow Gum Railway Network, with summer field flowers and historical A mountain hut Bogong Hi Plains,
Other activities include cross-country skiing (alpine skiing at adjacent resort), camping, canoeing, cycling, quad drive, warm season horseback riding.
Victoria Park acknowledges the traditional owner of the Victorian Aborigines including its parks and protected areas. As their traditional country, their cultural traditions, Bidawal, Dhudhuroa, Gunaikurnai, Jaithmathang, Taungurong and Nindi-Ngudjam Ngarigu at Monero Alps National Park
Conditions in the park may change for various reasons.For the latest information on change of regional conditions, please visit the related park page on the website of Parks Victoria.
The Alps National Park is a national park located in the Central Highlands and Alps in Victoria, Australia. There are 646,000 hectares (1,600,000 acres) of national park in the northeast of Melbourne. It covers the majority of Victoria's great divide, including the highest point in the state of Victoria in the 1986 meter Prairie bogong and related sub-alpine forests and bogong plateau (6516 feet) mountain, the largest national of Victoria It is a park. . The northeast border of the park is located at the border of New South Wales, next to the Kosciuszko National Park. On 7th November 2008, the Alps National Park was registered in the Australian National Heritage List and became one of the 11 regions of the Australian Alps National Park and Reserve.
In most of the history of the national parks in Europe, this park carries out agricultural activities and in the summer you can pasture cattle in the plateau. The alpine area of Australia was first used for grazing around the 1940s. Concern about environmental impact, the government began to eliminate some of the Alpine grazing in the coming century. In the 1920s, grazing was temporarily suspended at Buffalo Hills National Park and completely stopped in 1952. Cows were kept from Kosciusko National Park in New South Wales State because of the concern about the influence of grazing on the water quality in the Snow River Project from the 1950's to the 1960's. In the 1980 's Mount Howitt, in the early 1990s gave up Mount Giather, Hossum and Bogong grazing, leaving about a third from around the northern plains and part of the Davis Bluff bogong plateau Alps . National park - over 200,000 hectares (490,000 acres) - for grazing