This paper focuses on the settler colonial landscapes of tourism in the regional city of Dubbo, Australia. Dubbo is situated on Wiradyuri Country in the Orana region of New South Wales. While recent regional tourist initiatives and municipal planning seek to emphasise First Nations culture and heritage, the city still largely reiterates settler colonial landscapes in dominant tourism branding. Focusing specifically on the heritage-listed Old Dubbo Gaol and the Dundullimal Homestead, a former pastoral station, I explicate how these tourist experiencescapes are settler re-presentations of First Nations Country. These sites exemplify an element of tourism branding that promotes the city’s pastoral landscape as home to the ingenuity and innovation of the region. By occluding the relationship between invasion, carcerality, and Indigenous dispossession, these pastoral experiencescapes reproduce for visitors settler colonial metanarratives of dwelling. The Old Dubbo Gaol and Dundullimal occupy a broader settler colonial landscape where Dubbo is presented historically as ‘empty’ until settlers exploited the town’s ‘natural’ resources. Using Tim Ingold’s notion of taskscape, I show how contemporary tourist experiencescapes are re-presentations of the environmental attritions wrought by settler colonial taskscapes and activities, the latter of which are resisted by ongoing First Nations presence, custodianship, and histories in the city.