Warren National Park is in southwest Western Australia, about 350km from Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 18km from the small town of Pemberton, covering about 2981 hectares.
Warren National Park is covered in the forests of the tall Karri Tree, some of which are nearly 90 metres tall. Visitors walk their way through the surface of the forest, feeling small against these ancient plant giants. There are three tall Cary trees around Pemberton for visitors to climb, including one called Dave Evans Bicentrial Tree, inside Warren National Park.
In addition, canoeing is the most popular event on the Warren River inside the national park, and picnic and barbecue facilities make it a popular place to relax in nature. Heartbreak Trail is the perfect driving route across the park and along the Wallen River, where there are designated campsites and popular season fishing and catching blue magic shrimp.
Access to Warren National Park requires the purchase of tickets (prices as of early 2020):
- Below 12 cars: A $15/car
- Cars over 12: A $7/person (over 6 years old)
- Tickets are valid for one day and can be re-entered and re-entered, with the exception of Yanchep National Park and Nambung National Park, which enter the vast majority of other Western Australian national parks on the day of purchase without re-payment
- Free walk or car access to National Park