Serendip Sanctuary

Serendip Sanctuary

Serendip Sanctuary is located at 100 Windermere Road, Lara

Serendip Sanctuary is a wildlife oasis close to Melbourne where you can see kangaroos, wallabies, emus and a huge variety of birdlife. The sanctuary is a protected home to hundreds of native animals, including rare and endangered species.

Serendip Sanctuary is a great place to enjoy a family day trip near Geelong. The sanctuary showcases the open grassy woodlands and wetlands of the volcanic Western Plains, making it an ideal spot to see birdlife and learn about wetlands ecology.

Visit the bird hides to see some of the 150 bird species that breed at, or visit, Serendip Sanctuary. Birds can be seen within metres of the viewing areas as they preen, feed, incubate eggs and rear young. The Wildlife Walk is a popular walk where you can experience close encounters with wildlife.

Relax and enjoy a picnic or barbecue at the picnic area near the main car park. Facilities include free electric barbecues, a picnic shelter with tables and seats, drinking water, and toilets with access for people with limited mobility.

Flora at Serendip Sanctuary
Serendip is a part of the Western Volcanic Plains and was home to grassland, wetland and grassy-woodland communities. In the 1880s the European settlers arrived in the area and built a farm on the property. All the grasslands disappeared, and wildlife left the area. The property became public land in the 1950s. Since then Serendip has re-created a range of habitats etc.

Since 1959 Serendip has re-created a range of habitats which has seen the number of animal species increase from 40 (with few breeding) to over 150 today (with over 60 breeding). The sanctuary has also demonstrated the compatibility of farming and wildlife.

The birds at Serendip are there because the wetlands and grassy woodlands provide habitat for them. These wetlands are part of a larger number of wetlands in the region. As many wetlands have been modified or drained and no longer provide habitat, these remaining wetlands are important conservation areas.

Serendip has many different wetland types, each with its own characteristics. The shallow freshwater wetland is ephemeral and dries out every two to three years unless it receives a flow of water from the You Yangs water catchment. The marshland at Serendip has channels of varying depths designed to cater for a range of waterbird species. Trees such as River Red Gums and wattles around Lake Serendip attract different species of birds. Finally, the North Arm of Lake Serendip is an example of a permanent open water wetland.

Native grass and herb species used for revegetating Serendip include various acacias, eucalypts, casuarina, Tussock grass (Poa labillardieri), Common Wallaby Grass (Danthonia caespitosa), Windmill Grass (Chloris truncata), and Common Everlasting (Chrysocephalum apiculatum).


Wildlife at Serendip Sanctuary
More than 150 bird species common to the Western Plains of Victoria have been recorded at Serendip Sanctuary.

Look for Cape Barren Geese and Magpie Geese in the shallow, freshwater wetland, and many ducks, White-faced Heron, Nankeen Night Heron, Black Swans and grebes in and around the marshland.

Honeyeaters and wattlebirds feed on nectar and insects in the trees around Lake Serendip and Whistling and Black Kites soar up above looking for small prey on the ground.

The Billabong provides habitat for various ducks, swamphens and moorhens and attracts other food for the birds such as frogs, water rats and snakes. The North Arm permanent wetland is more reliable for fish populations, providing food for fishing birds like pelicans and cormorants. Keep watch for Chestnut Teal, Yellow-billed Spoonbills and flocks of White Ibis flying about preparing to roost in the trees around the permanent wetland each night.

Australian Bustards and Bush Stone-curlew are two rare Victorian birds that were once common on the Western Plains and now find a protected home at Serendip. Brolgas (Grus rubicundus) and Australian Bustards (Ardeotis australis) were chosen for the captive breeding program at Serendip, designed to rehabilitate species that have become rare or extinct on the Western Plains. The success of the captive breeding program has received international recognition.

Australia's rarest waterfowl, the Freckled Duck, and the most secretive of owls, the endangered Masked Owl, are now also on display at the Sanctuary.

Serendip also provides habitat for a variety of mammal species including Eastern Grey Kangaroos, Black Wallabies and Pademelons, now extinct in the wild in Victoria.

This area is well known for its wildlife. Keep an eye out for Tawny Frogmouths, Bush Stone-curlews, Australian Bustards, Freckled Ducks, Inland Bearded Dragon, Brolga, Cape Barren Goose, along with: Kangaroos, Emus and Wallabies.

Serendip Sanctuary is located at 100 Windermere Road, Lara. It is at the base of the You Yangs, 60km from Melbourne and 22km north of Geelong. It is signposted from the Princes Highway.

Serendip Sanctuary is open every day from 8.00am-4.00pm, but is closed on Christmas Day and Good Friday



❊ Address ❊


 ⊜  100 Windermere Road,  Lara  View Map
100 Windermere Road, LaraVictoria





❊ Web Links ❊


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