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Walk the dog, make a friend: Ballarat's parks are quietly becoming the city's best fitness hubs

From Lake Wendouree to Victoria Park, locals with dogs are discovering that off-leash areas do more for their health than any gym membership.

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By Ballarat Wellness Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 7:25 am

4 min read

Updated 19 h ago· 12 July 2026, 9:07 pm

AI-assisted · human-reviewed where required

AI may assist with research, summarising and drafting. Where public source links underpin the article, they are shown below. Sensitive material is held for human review, and people oversee the standards and corrections process. The Daily Ballarat covers Ballarat news. It is provided for general information only and is not professional, legal, financial, or medical advice. Read our editorial standards →

Walk the dog, make a friend: Ballarat's parks are quietly becoming the city's best fitness hubs
Photo by Lloyd James on Pexels

Seven in the morning at the Lake Wendouree foreshore, and the path is already busy. Kelpies, labradors, a scruffy terrier mix, and the humans trotting alongside them, have claimed the western edge of the 6.3-kilometre lakeside circuit before most of Ballarat has boiled a kettle. This is not an accident. Dog owners here have quietly turned the foreshore and a handful of other local green spaces into something that functions less like a park and more like an outdoor community centre with better air quality.

The timing matters. After years of remote work reshaping daily routines across regional Victoria, and with cost-of-living pressures making gym memberships a harder sell, the average commercial gym in Ballarat runs between $60 and $80 a month, free, dog-friendly public space has become genuinely competitive as a fitness option. Research published through the University of Western Australia found that dog owners are 34 per cent more likely to meet recommended weekly physical activity targets than people without dogs, largely because the animal imposes a schedule. Rain or no rain, the dog needs walking.

The spots locals actually use

Victoria Park on Sturt Street is the most organised of Ballarat's informal fitness hubs. The off-leash area in the park's northern section draws a consistent crowd on weekday mornings, particularly between 7 and 9 am. Regular visitors describe it as loosely structured, nobody has organised anything formally, but groups have formed around similar walking loops, and the social contact is real. City of Ballarat maintains the off-leash zone and updated the fencing along the northern boundary in late 2024.

Llanberris Reserve in Wendouree is smaller and less known, but dog owners in the suburb treat it as a daily fixture. The reserve sits off Gillies Street North and connects loosely to the broader trail network that runs toward the lake. For families in the surrounding streets, it functions as a de facto meeting point, especially on weekend mornings when the weather holds.

The Lake Wendouree circuit itself remains the flagship. The path is sealed, flat, and fully accessible, with the Ballarat Botanical Gardens entrance on Wendouree Parade offering toilets and a water tap, including one at dog height, installed by City of Ballarat as part of the 2023 foreshore upgrade. The rowing club activity on the lake provides an oddly motivating backdrop. Dogs are permitted on-leash along the full circuit, and the social density of the path means a solo walker rarely stays solo for long.

Why the fitness benefit is real

The physical case is straightforward. A moderate-paced 6.3-kilometre walk, one full lake circuit, burns roughly 350 to 400 calories for an average adult and comfortably satisfies the Australian Department of Health's guideline of 30 minutes of moderate activity on most days. Do it five mornings a week with a dog and you have hit the weekly target before Friday.

The mental health dimension is less discussed but equally documented. A 2023 Deakin University report on social isolation in regional Victorian towns found that structured informal contact, the kind that happens naturally in shared outdoor spaces, was consistently linked to lower self-reported loneliness scores. Dog parks, the report noted specifically, produce the kind of low-stakes repeated interaction that builds what researchers call "weak ties": the acquaintances who are not close friends but who make a neighbourhood feel liveable.

For anyone looking to start, City of Ballarat's website lists all gazetted off-leash areas with opening hours and conditions, some restrict access during junior sport seasons. Ballarat Veterinary Practice on Dawson Street North recommends new dog owners build up distance gradually, particularly for younger or older dogs, and the same principle applies to their humans. Anyone with existing joint or cardiovascular concerns should check with a GP or with Ballarat Health Services' community health team before ramping up a new outdoor routine. The parks are not going anywhere. The terrier will wait.

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Published by The Daily Ballarat

Covering wellness in Ballarat. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources, under human oversight and our editorial standards. Sensitive material is held for human review before publication. See our editorial standards.

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