Coffin Bay | Travel News, Guides, Ideas & Tips | Traveller

We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later.

Advertisement

Coffin Bay

A tray of Coffin Bay oysters – hard to resist.

Coffin Bay oysters, South Australia: An oyster farm tour of the world-famous seafood

I'm wondering how I'll ever eat a regular oyster again.

  • by Nina Karnikowski
Coffin Bay

Snoozing dolphins, dunking roos

At Coffin Bay, Max Anderson discovers a smorgasbord of seafood delicacies in a world of believe-it-or-not delights.

Swimming with sea lions at Baird Bay.

The South Australia guide: Eyre Peninsula

From the big fish of Port Lincoln to a luxury inland camp, the Eyre Peninsula can easily be explored over a long weekend, writes Dominic Rolfe.

Prized ... Coffin Bay oysters.

Five best foods

The best bites to try in South Australia.

  • by Kate Jordan-Moore

On the half-shell, straight up

Coffin Bay is alive with mouth-watering delicacies, writes Flip Byrnes.

Advertisement
Looking from Point Avoid across Avoid Bay

Coffin Bay - Places to See

<b>Coffin Bay (including the Coffin Bay National Park, Wangary, Farm Beach and Gallipoli Beach)</b> <br> <b>Attractive and isolated holiday retreat on the southern tip of the Eyre Peninsula</b> <br> Coffin Bay and the beautiful Coffin Bay National Park (which covers 29 000 ha of the peninsula) are located 703 km west of Adelaide and 47 km west of Port Lincoln. Coffin Bay is a typical Australian holiday resort (of the unspoilt variety) full of holiday units and relatively cheap accommodation and designed for people who want to spend a holiday fishing, sailing, skindiving, bushwalking or enjoying themselves on the beach. In recent times the calm waters of the bay have become enormously popular so that the population of the area, especially in school holiday time, is likely to increase from the small regular population of around 300-400 to over 3000.

Coffin Bay - Fast Facts

<b>Coffin Bay (including the Coffin Bay National Park, Wangary, Farm Beach and Gallipoli Beach)</b> <br> <b>Attractive and isolated holiday retreat on the southern tip of the Eyre Peninsula</b> <br> Coffin Bay and the beautiful Coffin Bay National Park (which covers 29 000 ha of the peninsula) are located 703 km west of Adelaide and 47 km west of Port Lincoln. Coffin Bay is a typical Australian holiday resort (of the unspoilt variety) full of holiday units and relatively cheap accommodation and designed for people who want to spend a holiday fishing, sailing, skindiving, bushwalking or enjoying themselves on the beach. In recent times the calm waters of the bay have become enormously popular so that the population of the area, especially in school holiday time, is likely to increase from the small regular population of around 300-400 to over 3000.

Coffin Bay - Eat

<b>Coffin Bay (including the Coffin Bay National Park, Wangary, Farm Beach and Gallipoli Beach)</b> <br> <b>Attractive and isolated holiday retreat on the southern tip of the Eyre Peninsula</b> <br> Coffin Bay and the beautiful Coffin Bay National Park (which covers 29 000 ha of the peninsula) are located 703 km west of Adelaide and 47 km west of Port Lincoln. Coffin Bay is a typical Australian holiday resort (of the unspoilt variety) full of holiday units and relatively cheap accommodation and designed for people who want to spend a holiday fishing, sailing, skindiving, bushwalking or enjoying themselves on the beach. In recent times the calm waters of the bay have become enormously popular so that the population of the area, especially in school holiday time, is likely to increase from the small regular population of around 300-400 to over 3000.

Coffin Bay - Sleep

<b>Coffin Bay (including the Coffin Bay National Park, Wangary, Farm Beach and Gallipoli Beach)</b> <br> <b>Attractive and isolated holiday retreat on the southern tip of the Eyre Peninsula</b> <br> Coffin Bay and the beautiful Coffin Bay National Park (which covers 29 000 ha of the peninsula) are located 703 km west of Adelaide and 47 km west of Port Lincoln. Coffin Bay is a typical Australian holiday resort (of the unspoilt variety) full of holiday units and relatively cheap accommodation and designed for people who want to spend a holiday fishing, sailing, skindiving, bushwalking or enjoying themselves on the beach. In recent times the calm waters of the bay have become enormously popular so that the population of the area, especially in school holiday time, is likely to increase from the small regular population of around 300-400 to over 3000.

Coffin Bay - Culture and History

<b>Coffin Bay (including the Coffin Bay National Park, Wangary, Farm Beach and Gallipoli Beach)</b> <br> <b>Attractive and isolated holiday retreat on the southern tip of the Eyre Peninsula</b> <br> Coffin Bay and the beautiful Coffin Bay National Park (which covers 29 000 ha of the peninsula) are located 703 km west of Adelaide and 47 km west of Port Lincoln. Coffin Bay is a typical Australian holiday resort (of the unspoilt variety) full of holiday units and relatively cheap accommodation and designed for people who want to spend a holiday fishing, sailing, skindiving, bushwalking or enjoying themselves on the beach. In recent times the calm waters of the bay have become enormously popular so that the population of the area, especially in school holiday time, is likely to increase from the small regular population of around 300-400 to over 3000.