Sorrento 16°C Sunset 5:48 pm Bay glassy, tide low Winter Insider · June 2026

The National Golf Club

The National is the Peninsula's most ambitious golf property — four championship courses across two sites. Three sit on one sweeping Cape Schanck plateau: the Old (Robert Trent Jones Jr), the Moonah (Peter Thomson), and the Gunnamatta (Greg Norman). The fourth, the Long Island course, sits 50 minutes north at Frankston. Together they form arguably the strongest four-course private golf address in Australia. The caveat is access. The National is a private members' club. Non-member play is possible through reciprocal rights, corporate days, and occasional open days — but it is not a walk-up booking in the way St Andrews Beach or Moonah Links are. For Peninsula Insider readers, that changes the editorial framing. The National matters as context — Peninsula golf would be less serious without it — but it is not the course to build a visitor's weekend around unless you have a member connection. If you do have access, the Moonah is the most architecturally interesting, the Old is the grandest, and the Gunnamatta is the wildest. The views across the Southern Ocean from the clifftop holes are the best on any Australian course. The clubhouse is strong. The conditioning is meticulous. Everything you would expect from one of the country's top private clubs is delivered.

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Where to eat, drink, or stay nearby

The best explore pages should lead somewhere next.

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Restaurant Cape Schanck

Barragunda Dining

165 Boneo Rd, Cape Schanck VIC 3939 · $$$$

Chef Simone Watts's farm dining room on a 1000-acre regenerative estate at Cape Schanck, one of the Peninsula's most compelling new voices.

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Villa Cape Schanck

The Cape Retreat

Cape Schanck VIC 3939 · $$$$

Twelve luxury suites on a Cape Schanck hilltop with Bass Strait views, primarily exclusive-hire, individual suites may be available on enquiry.

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Ashcombe Maze & Lavender Gardens

Ashcombe Maze holds Australia's oldest symmetrical hedge maze, a circular rose garden, a lavender labyrinth, and a small café that sells lavender everything, ice cream, scones, shortbread, tisane, from a room that smells exactly like the fields outside. The gardens are at their peak in spring when the lavender is up, but the maze works in any season and the café is reason enough in autumn. The place is deliberately low-tempo. You walk the maze, you sit in the lavender, you drink tea, and you leave feeling like you have stumbled into a slightly older, gentler version of the Peninsula. It is a good rainy-afternoon reset and an even better spring morning plan. Pair it with Flinders Sourdough on the way through or Flinders General Store afterwards. Bring the kids. Bring older visitors. Do not try to be cynical about it, the charm wins.

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Cape Schanck 180 min · Moderate

Bushrangers Bay

Bushrangers Bay is a hidden ocean beach accessed via a 2.5-kilometre walk through coastal heathland from Cape Schanck - and, remarkably, almost nobody goes here even in summer. In April it is completely deserted. Dramatic rock formations, sea caves along the cliffs, and the raw power of the Southern Ocean breaking against the headlands at the far end of the beach. The walk in from Cape Schanck is straightforward and well-marked, descending gradually through the heath to the back of the beach. Once you arrive, the scale of the place - cliffs, caves, ocean, almost no human presence - is the reason to come. Walk the sand, look at the rock formations, turn around. One of the Peninsula's genuinely remote-feeling experiences, hiding in plain sight. Bring water; there are no facilities at the beach itself.

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Cape Schanck 90 min · Moderate

Bushrangers Bay Walk

Bushrangers Bay is the walk we send people to when they say they want to see the wilder side of the Peninsula without committing to a full-day hike. The track drops from the Cape Schanck lighthouse precinct through coastal scrub and opens onto a broad crescent of basalt and sand that feels much further from Melbourne than it is. The return climb is enough to justify lunch afterwards, but not so punishing that it tips into chore. Do it in the late afternoon when the light starts to flatten across the water and the whole coastline turns silver.

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Further reading

Journal pieces that deepen this stop

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Trail Guide 6 min

Cape Schanck — The Complete Guide

22 April 2026

The 1859 limestone lighthouse, the boardwalk to Pulpit Rock and Pebble Beach, and the 5.4km return walk to Bushrangers Bay. Cape Schanck lighthouse grounds are free from 6am — lighthouse tours are ticketed. Here is everything.

Curated by our editors.

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Peninsula This Weekend 31 May

King's Birthday is the loudest winter weekend on the Peninsula. Two clear moves, and the rest of the weekend kept open.

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  • How to Build a Red Hill Saturday
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