Barwon Heads is a coastal township on the Bellarine Peninsula, near Geelong, Victoria, Australia. It is situated on the west bank of the mouth of the Barwon River below Lake Connewarre, while it is bounded to the west by farmland, golf courses and the saline ephemeral wetland of Murtnaghurt Lagoon. At the 2016 census, Barwon Heads had a population of 3,875.
The old Barwon Heads Bridge
Aerial perspective of the Barwon river discharging into the Bass Strait
Aerial panorama of Barwon Heads Bridge (2018)
View of the town and the Barwon River estuary, as pictured from atop the southern head
The Bellarine Peninsula is a peninsula located south-west of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia, surrounded by Port Phillip, Corio Bay and Bass Strait. The peninsula, together with the Mornington Peninsula, separates Port Phillip Bay from Bass Strait. The peninsula itself was originally occupied by Indigenous Australian clans of the Wadawurrung nation, prior to European settlement in the early 19th century. Early European settlements were initially centred on wheat and grain agriculture, before the area became a popular tourist destination with most visitors arriving by paddle steamer on Port Phillip in the late 19th century.
Aerial perspective of Barwon Heads Bridge
Ocean Grove beach on Bass Strait
The wreck of the Ozone, offshore at Indented Head.
Wind generator at Breamlea, built 1987, photo taken in 2007