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Our Office / Torquay 03 5261 6838 18 Pearl Street Torquay Geelong & Western Districts VIC 3228
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Torquay
Torquay is undoubtedly Australia's surfing capital and a holiday favourite. It is the place to enjoy the fun of the beach, do some serious shopping at leading brands’ retail outlets and experience a unique and scenic part of the Surf Coast.
Torquay also has quiet, protected beaches popular with families, opportunities for other water-based pursuits and plenty of restaurants and cafes to try.
Torquay also offers diverse living with ever changing streetscapes catering for both first home buyers right through to luxurious, upmarket living.
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Jan Juc
Jan Juc is flanked by beautiful beaches, some of Victoria’s best surf, the Torquay golf course, and the Surf Coast highway. It is serviced by a small group of shops, a café and a hotel but is five minutes drive from the larger shopping and sporting facilities of Torquay. Jan Juc beach is one of the prettiest swimming beaches in the region with sandy safe swimming and its own Surf Life Saving Club. Jan Juc boasts a larger residential population than many beach towns and it’s well made, curbed roads and speed humps give the town a more suburban feel. Nestled in a valley between the highway and Bass Strait, Jan Juc is sheltered from the prevailing south westerly winds, but is still next door to spectacular coastal scenery. Wooden staircases descend to the beach at regular intervals. Atop the cliffs, platforms and walking tracks help display the grandeur of Bass Strait.
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Bellbrae
Bellbrae is a small town in an attractive creek side setting. The central township is on an elevated slope with northerly aspects. It is bounded to the north and west by Spring Creek and the Great Ocean Road from Geelong to Anglesea. There is a small school, a recreation reserve, tennis courts but no stores. The attraction of Bellbrae lies in its rural character and it’s proximity to surf coast beaches including Point Addis and Bells Beach, only three kilometres to the south. The undulating hills offer beautiful rural views for elevated sites. In recent decades, five and ten hectare blocks have been sold to people moving out of the city. Small farms, horse studs, potteries, nurseries and other creative industries now abound in the area.
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Breamlea
Breamlea remains the most secluded of seaside resorts along this beautiful coast. There is one store which serves the few residents and the caravan park. The seclusion has led to a paradoxical exclusivity and buoyant residential property prices.
Otherwise, little has changed at Breamlea. Thompsons Creek still runs through a natural lattice of reedy canals and widens before it enters Buckleys Bay. Point Impossible is a well-known longboard surfing break and the sheltered beaches are still popular during summer.
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