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Locals Reveal Canberra's 7 Hidden Nature Walks Beyond Tourist Sites

From a secret waterfall in the suburbs to a heritage-listed fire trail, these lesser-known paths offer solitude without leaving the city.

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By Canberra Wellness Desk · Published 11 July 2026, 4:15 am

4 min read

Updated 56 min ago· 11 July 2026, 6:43 pm

AI-assisted · human-reviewed where required

AI may assist with research, summarising and drafting. Where public source links underpin the article, they are shown below. Sensitive material is held for human review, and people oversee the standards and corrections process. The Daily Canberra covers Canberra news. It is provided for general information only and is not professional, legal, financial, or medical advice. Read our editorial standards →

Locals Reveal Canberra's 7 Hidden Nature Walks Beyond Tourist Sites
Photo by SandwichCafe / flickr (by)

On any given weekend, hundreds of walkers pound the gravel around Lake Burley Griffin, but a growing number of Canberrans are ditching the crowds for quieter trails that rarely appear in guidebooks.

With daytime temperatures in Canberra hitting an average of 28°C this July, 2 degrees above the long-term mean, according to the Bureau of Meteorology, more residents are seeking shaded, secluded routes for their morning exercise. The hidden walks locals treasure aren't just about escaping tourists; they're about finding cool air, birdlife and a sense of discovery within 10 minutes of Civic.

Waterfall on a suburban doorstep

One such spot is the short but steep Gibraltar Creek Trail in the Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve, a 40-minute drive from the city centre. The 3.2-kilometre loop climbs through dry sclerophyll forest to a seasonal waterfall that flows strongest after winter rains. Locals know to park at the lower car park off Tidbinbilla Road, not the main visitor centre, shaving 15 minutes off the walk. The ACT Parks and Conservation Service reports that Tidbinbilla saw 189,000 visits in 2025, but rangers estimate fewer than 15 per cent of visitors venture beyond the main boardwalk and koala enclosure.

Closer to town, the Red Hill Nature Reserve offers a 2.7-kilometre circuit that winds past former quarry sites and old fence lines from the 1870s. The path starts near the corner of Monaro Crescent and Pindari Crescent in Red Hill, and gains 80 metres of elevation, enough for a decent heart rate bump without requiring hiking boots. Regulars from the Red Hill Regenerators volunteer group have spent the past two winters removing invasive blackberry and planting more than 1,200 local shrubs, including bush peas and silver wattles, to restore the understory.

Fire trails and forgotten railway

Another insider favourite is the former Canbera-Queanbeyan railway corridor, which has been partially converted into a walking and cycling path between Kingston and Fyshwick. The 2.5-kilometre section from the Kingston foreshore to Dairy Road follows the old rail alignment, crosses the Molonglo River on a disused steel bridge, and passes the heritage-listed 'Engine Shed' building built in 1913. The ACT Government's Active Travel Office logged 4,300 weekly users on this path in its March 2026 survey, but most are cyclists heading to Fyshwick markets, not walkers seeking a tranquil, car-free route.

For those willing to drive a little further, the 6-kilometre Bushrangers Creek Trail in the Murrumbidgee River Corridor starts at the end of Caswell Drive in Weston Creek and follows the creek through box-gum woodland to the Murrumbidgee. The trail is part of the 12,500-hectare Canberra Nature Park, which the ACT government manages as a network of 33 reserves. Entry is free; a paper map can be downloaded from the ACT Parks website or picked up at the Weston Creek Community Centre on Parkinson Street.

Beyond Blue ACT coordinates a monthly 'Walk and Talk' group on the first Saturday of each month that uses a rotating selection of these hidden trails. The June 2026 walk along the 'Back Creek' section of the Murrumbidgee near Tharwa drew 22 participants, organisers said in their quarterly report. The group provides a free guided walk leader and encourages participants to stay for morning tea at a nearby café.

The practical advice for anyone wanting to try these walks: start early, bring water, and download the free Canberra Nature Map app, which shows real-time trail conditions, fire danger ratings and parking availability. For beginners, the Red Hill circuit is the safest bet, it's well marked, has a bench at the summit, and can be completed in under an hour. As with any new exercise regimen, it's wise to consult a GP, particularly for those with existing health conditions. But for Canberrans craving a patch of quiet just beyond the tourist maps, these hidden paths deliver solitude without leaving the city limits.

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Published by The Daily Canberra

Covering wellness in Canberra. This article was generated by AI and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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