Armadale Reptile Centre
Over 200 reptiles with snakes, lizards turtles and lots more just off the South Western Highway in Armadale.
Related Travel Information
Australian Reptile Centre
The Australian Reptile Centre Canberra provides a dynamic, professionally presented educational venue of all things reptilian. Handle Australia’s largest, deadliest and most colourful snakes and reptiles including pythons and the Taipan snake at our natural enclosure in Canberra.
If you've always wanted to handle a python or if you just want to find out more about Australia's famously lethal fauna (and there sure are a lot of them!) then this is the place to visit - We are the reptiles information specialists.
The Australian Reptile Centre Canberra provides a dynamic, professionally presented educational venue of all things reptilian.
Burswood Casino
To the east of the city, on the other bank of the river, is the impressive Burswood Casino, which also contains a high class hotel and conference facilities. It can be reached by taking a train to Burswood Station, on the Armadale Line. Next to the casino is Burswood Park. Burswood
Melbourne City Centre
The city centre is a combination of modern high-rise and beautiful historical buildings. Melbourne’s city centre is very well laid out in a grid. Latrobe St borders the north, Flinders St the south, Spring St the east and Spencer St the west. The city centre is filled with amazing eateries, not all of them in obvious locations. The smaller city streets hide some of the best Greek, Italian and other cosmopolitan eateries.
China Town occupies two blocks of the city, starting at the corner of Swanston and Little Bourke streets. The Bourke St Mall sits between Swanston and Elizabeth
Forrest Place
At the centre of the city Forrest Place is much improved since it became for pedestrians only. It is flanked by the impressive G.P.O., a small part of which is still used for its intended purpose. Perth Visitor Centre is here too, and the square is used for open-air concerts and entertainment. Forrest was an explorer and the first Premier of Western Australia.
The Red Centre
The dry, desolate outback at the center of Australia takes its name from the color of the oxidized dust that stretches to the horizon. To many travelers, the Red Centre represents the essence of Australia. Flat lands bake perpetually under a burning sun rarely obscured by rain clouds. The gnarled vegetation is weedy and sparse, and the wildlife is locked in a constant struggle for survival with the unforgiving climate and the unbearable hush flies. Out of this stark landscape, at the geographic center of the continent, rises Uluru (Ayers Rock), a celebrated symbol of die land