Take a trip through the many and varied landscapes of the north-east goldfields – from dramatic breakaways to samphire flats and salt lakes, and from vast mulga plains to magnificent marble gum on spinifex sands. This Loop is your introduction to a fascinating natural environment, and to the human influences that have shaped it over the last hundred years.
At close to 350km this is a long day’s outing. It is designed to be travelled in a clockwise direction, initially heading north from
Leonora on the Goldfields highway. Note that approximately 70% of the Trail is gravel – this is generally of good quality, but can suffer after rain. Check with the Shire for latest conditions!
The Darlot Loop trail has 15 interpretive sites, spaced roughly 15 – 30kms apart. At each of these locations you will find an interpretive panel and, somewhere nearby, a figure, a ‘ghost’ from the past or a creature from the present, waiting to share a story with you… Let these rusty steel story tellers introduce you to the people and the
places and to the
pests and the perfectly natural – but you will need to go out and find them first! At each stopping place along both loops someone (or something!) is waiting to tell you their story – go and explore, see who and what you can discover, and learn about the lives and landscapes of this remarkable region.
Go to top Interactive Route Map

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Darlot Loop 
From: Leonora
To: Leonora
This trek supports moving map, to take a virtual tour click on the Play button.
There are no
permits required for this trek.
Go to top Things to See & Do
Before you set out, ensure that you are carrying enough fuel, water and food supplies for the journey. In the town of
Leonora, you can get some helpful advice at the Information Centre. The town also has a supermarket and a fuel station, medical facilities, and
accommodation. Carry good communication gear such as a
HF radio or
UHF radio. For more information, ExplorOz has some good articles that you can read including:
Satellite Phone,
Outback Survival,
First Aid,
Prospecting for Gold,
Food & Water,
4WD Driving Skills & Rules,
Spare Parts and Tools,
Tyres.
Below is a list of points to consider before setting out.
- Mobile phone coverage can be quite limited – do not rely on this always being available!
- Let someone know where you’re going and when you expect to be back.
- Be sure to pack water, fuel, spare tyre(s), tools, a tow-rope and a shovel (at least).
- Consider carrying a satellite phone or an EPIRB, in case of emergency.
Road Conditions
- Large parts of these trails are on gravel roads (well in excess of 50%)
- Watch out for bog holes (when wet) and bull dust and/or corrugations when dry.
- Creek crossings can be washed out – always slow down as damage can be hard to see.
- While travel in a 2WD vehicle is quite possible, with care, a 4WD is preferable.
Other Important Information
- These trails pass through a number of active pastoral properties – please do not travel off-road without the prior permission of the owner or manager.
- Enjoy trying to ‘strike it rich’ – but do keep off active mining leases.
- Old mine workings can be extremely dangerous. Be very careful, as many shafts are unmarked and unstable. In particular, keep children close to you at all times.
- If you’re travelling with a pet dog, never let it roam free. Baits containing 1080 poison have been scattered throughout the region to control wild dogs and foxes.
Fuel Supplies & Usage
 | Leonora |
Diesel | 4cyl 49 litres |
ULP | 4cyl 56 litres |
LPG | 4cyl 70 litres |
| 6cyl 53 litres | 6cyl 63 litres | 6cyl 61 litres |
| 8cyl 53 litres | 8cyl 58 litres | |
Usage is averaged from
TrekFuel (* specific to trek) submissions and calculated based on trek distance.
Besides
Leonora, there are also fuel supplies available at Leinster.
Best Time To Visit
The best time to visit is during the cooler months between March and October. The temperature during the summer months of December, January, and February can sometimes be over 40 degrees Celsius.
Closest Climatic Station
Leonora
Distance from Trek Mid Point 0.17km N
| | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun |
Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
| Mean Max. °C |
37.1 | 35.3 | 32.7 | 27.9 |
22.8 | 19.0 | 18.5 | 20.6 |
24.8 | 28.8 | 32.2 | 35.3 |
| Mean Min. °C |
21.7 | 20.9 | 18.6 | 14.8 |
10.2 | 7.3 | 6.1 | 6.9 |
10.0 | 13.6 | 17.0 | 20.0 |
| Mean Rain mm |
23.9 | 29.6 | 28.7 | 20.6 |
24.2 | 24.9 | 18.8 | 16.1 |
9.2 | 9.1 | 12.0 | 16.6 |
Best time to travel Ok time to travel Travel NOT recommended
Services & Supplies
The following locations have various services and supplies:
LeonoraThe small town of
Agnew (not featured on this trek also provides food, water and
accommodation.
Go to top Camp Sites & Accommodation
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Leonora - WA 

Leonora is the service centre for the mining, exploration and well established pastoral industry. Gwalia is a must see for the visitor as it has been restored to its original condition (as it was in
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There is possibly no more widespread tree species in the dry heart of
Australia than mulga. On these two trails, you are well and truly in Mulga country.
There are two broad types of mulga woodland – one has a shrub understory, while the other has grasses and spinifex. Both will be seen along
the loop trails.
Of course, the landscape out here is not all mulga – far from it! In particular, the northern and eastern sectors of the Darlot Loop showcase a delightful variety of landforms and vegetation species. Hard spinifex makes an appearance as you leave the Goldfields Highway, bringing with it another sand-loving species, the magnificent marble gum. Desert oak, white Cyprus pine, prickly wattle and the water bush can all be seen along the trail. Hard stony quartz flats and sharply-defined watercourses bring variety, and breakaways (especially the terraces) are always a visual treat.
Wildlife you can expect to see along the trails include; Kangaroos, Euros, emus, wedge tail eagles, a vast array of birdlife (particularly around the watercourses), and all manner of reptiles, particularly goannas.
The Goldfields region has a strong and proud Aboriginal population, who inhabited the area for thousands of years before European settlement.
The first contact the area had with Europeans dates back to 1869 when explorer John
Forrest and his party, in search of the lost Leichhardt Expedition, made camp near a
hill and named it Mount
Leonora. It was then some twenty five years before more Europeans came to the area – but this time it was prospectors, not explorers, who came prowling around the area covered by the trails.
In 1894 Paddy Lawler stumbled on a scattering of alluvial gold 125km north-west of
Leonora, sparking a rush to the area from both
Cue and
Coolgardie. In the same year gold was found near
Lake Darlot, which quickly emptied the fledging camp of Lawlers of most of its men! When the rich Sons of
Gwalia reef was discovered soon afterwards in
Leonora,
Leonora was well on its way to becoming the centre for a major mining area – just as it remains today.