Woody Point & Redcliffe Peninsula
Woody Point is at the south-east end of the Redcliffe Peninsula, approximately 35 kms (22 miles) north-northeast of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Woody Point is a popular recreational destination within the Brisbane metropolitan area, and commands uninterrupted views of Moreton Bay and islands.
Woody Point Jetty is a 240-metre (790 ft) jetty with informative displays, seating and facilities for fishing.
The shipwreck remains of the HMQS Gayundah can be seen at Picnic Point (Woody Point).
HMQS Gayundah was a flat-iron gunboat operated by the Queensland Maritime Defence Force and later the Royal Australian Navy (as HMAS Gayundah). She entered service in 1884 and was decommissioned and sold to a civilian company in 1921. She then served as sand and gravel barge in Brisbane until the 1950s, when she was scrapped. In 1958, Gayundah was run aground at Woody Point near Redcliffe, to serve as a breakwater structure.
The Houghton Highway and the Ted Smout bridges span Bramble Bay from Brighton to Clontarf, Moreton Bay Region.