Attractions
Visitor and Interpretation Centre
The Hollybank Treetops Adventure visitor centre is the start and end of your canopy tour. Refreshments are available for sale within the centre and a gift shop sells keepsakes of your treetops adventure and lasting souvenirs of Tasmania.
The visitor centre is surrounded by picnic tables where you can enjoy refreshments and reflect upon your experience with friends or other tour members after undertaking your canopy tour.
Fly the wire
Book Now
Hollybank Treetops Adventure is unmatched by any other tourism experience in Australia. After an induction and briefing session, tour groups are taken into the forest canopy to glide along a series of cables set among the treetops. Platforms called ‘cloud stations' have been constructed around trees between each cable span at heights up to 23m above the forest floor.
Visitors are fitted with harnesses and led by highly trained guides as they soar through the tree canopy from one cloud station to the next. The cable spans increase from 15m to the thrilling 400m ride over the Pipers River.
The knowledgable and experienced guides play a pivotal role in the experience. They not only ensure the safety of all tour members but also provide informative and fascinating information on the surrounding forest and tree species.
The tour combines the tranquillity of the forest with the adrenalin rush of gliding above one of Tasmania's most incredible natural landscapes.
Groups leave the visitor centre at hourly intervals (half-hourly during the peak season) with tours taking approximately three hours.
Recreation at the Hollybank Forest Reserve
The Hollybank Forest Reserve is ideal for a family outing. A variety of barbecue and picnic areas are available on site, which provide the perfect setting for group get-togethers or functions. The reserve has areas that are ideal for a range of recreational activities including cricket, football or frisbee throwing.
A variety of walks throughout the Hollybank Reserve highlight the most scenic areas of the forest. Ranging from short gentle strolls to longer interpretive walks such as the ‘Walk of Change', the walking tracks allow visitors to explore and learn about the forest at their own pace. Visitors can also take a charming journey to the junction of Butchers Creek and Pipers River along a short walking track leading from the main picnic area.






