Birdwatching bliss
The Broome Bird Observatory is one of the top birdwatching spots in the world. From September to March each year, around 800,000 migratory shorebirds from Siberia visit the area on the shores of Roebuck Bay.
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Articles![]() Birdwatching blissThe Broome Bird Observatory is one of the top birdwatching spots in the world. From September to March each year, around 800,000 migratory shorebirds from Siberia visit the area on the shores of Roebuck Bay. ![]() Carried away in BroomeA short camel ride is a good way to enjoy Broome's Cable Beach and to relax in the tropical tranquillity. Broome Camel Safaris offers sunset rides along the pearl-white sands lapped by azure waters. ![]() Cultural mixBroome is a fascinating place with a mixture of cultures created by those who came in search of pearling wealth back in the 1860s. In addition to the local Aboriginal divers were Japanese, Malay, Timorese, Indonesian and Filipino crews, while Chinese shopkeepers supported the town's services and industries. As a result, Broome's population, its food and wider culture is unusually colourful and diverse. Pearling still remains one of the town's leading industries and tours are available. ![]() Eighty miles of sandOne of the district's tropical delights is Eighty Mile Beach. Located between Port Hedland and Broome, its brilliant white sands and intense blue seas belie the tragic effects of a cyclone that struck here in 1887. ![]() Houses and humpsEveryone loves the multicultural pearling port of Broome for its unique Australian architecture with Chinese and Japanese influences. Then there's the renowned Cable Beach, where you can even ride a camel over the sands. |

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