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        Welcome to Bruny Island, Tasmania.

(Tasmania's "Treasure Island")

Click here to take a virtual tour with 360 degree images.

First discovered by Abel Tasman and later visited by Furneaux, Cook, Bruni D'Entrecasteaux, Bass, Flinders and Bligh, Bruny Island lies to the south of Hobart, Tasmania and is separated from the Tasmanian mainland by the D'Entrecasteaux Channel or simply, "The Channel", which provides a large, sheltered, waterway some 60 kms long with many bays, islands and inlets to explore and fish. 

Bruny consists of two islands, very different in character, which are joined by a narrow isthmus, "The Neck".  North Bruny has a drier climate and is well suited to sheep farming whilst South Bruny is more mountainous  and has large areas of rain forest in addition to sandy heathlands.  Both islands have spectacular scenery with wonderful, deserted beaches and abundant wildlife. 

Bruny Island is well known for its Penguins, that appear each evening at the beach area known as The Neck.   A warden supervises the area during the summer months and plenty of "interpretative" information is available.  An evening visit to see the Penguins is well worth the effort.

In the past, the timber industry was predominant with many of Bruny's huge trees being milled and exported to both mainland Australia and Europe.  Later, there was a sandstone quarry which exported its products mainly to Victoria.  Melbourne GPO and several other public buildings were in fact built from Bruny 'freestone'.  Agriculture has always been important and the original settlers had to be quite self-sufficient until more recent times and the advent of the ferry service which replaced the old 'Channel Boats'.  The first apple trees in Australia were planted in Adventure Bay by Captain Bligh, (of the Mutiny on the Bounty fame), and for many years the fruit and orchard industries were employing many of the locals.  Fishing too has always been a local activity with wonderful scallops, oysters, mussels, abalone and crayfish in abundance together with a large variety of scale-fish. 

Today, very little of the old industries now remain and although there are still huge tracts of State Forest and National Parks, there are only two small sawmills in operation.  Farming too, has diminished, although many of the inhabitants still have a few sheep and cows.  Aquaculture, particularly with oysters, mussels and Atlantic salmon, has been steadily growing and 'ocean fresh produce' may be obtained locally. 

The population has remained steady at approx. 500 residents although there is a large shack-owner population who visit the island on a regular basis. 
Bruny is fast becoming a mecca for visitors, particularly from interstate and overseas, and has become a holiday escape for the people of Hobart, which lies about 1 hour away by road and ferry.  Consequently, there has been an increase in the number of holiday venues catering  for families, groups and the budget conscious.

Explore and visit our treasures as did the adventurers of old.  Romance, wildlife, history, beaches, Bruny Island has it all!