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Outback wrangler helps his son tackle a two-metre python

<p>The world famous "outback wrangler" has divided the internet after sharing a video of his two-year-old son wrestling with a python.</p> <p><span>Matt Wright, who runs the Top End Safari camp in the Northern Territory, posted a video to Instagram of his son Banjo grappling with an olive python's tail, one of the largest snakes in Australia.</span><span></span></p> <p><span>Matt, who also hosts the popular National Geographic show <em>Outback Wrangler</em>, captioned the video "learning the ropes", as Banjo follows in his dad's footsteps. </span></p> <p><span>In the video, Banjo is seen dressed in his outback khaki outfit, as he desperately tries to pull the massive snake away from the family's property.</span><span></span></p> <p>“Pull him out buddy, pull him out,” Wright said, as Banjo holds onto the snake’s tail.</p> <blockquote style="background: #FFF; border: 0; border-radius: 3px; box-shadow: 0 0 1px 0 rgba(0,0,0,0.5),0 1px 10px 0 rgba(0,0,0,0.15); margin: 1px; max-width: 540px; min-width: 326px; padding: 0; width: calc(100% - 2px);" class="instagram-media" data-instgrm-permalink="https://www.instagram.com/p/CUdYl01hDbV/?utm_source=ig_embed&amp;utm_campaign=loading" data-instgrm-version="14"> <div style="padding: 16px;"> <div style="display: flex; flex-direction: row; align-items: center;"> <div style="background-color: #f4f4f4; border-radius: 50%; flex-grow: 0; height: 40px; margin-right: 14px; width: 40px;"></div> <div style="display: flex; flex-direction: column; flex-grow: 1; justify-content: center;"> <div style="background-color: #f4f4f4; border-radius: 4px; flex-grow: 0; height: 14px; margin-bottom: 6px; width: 100px;"></div> <div style="background-color: #f4f4f4; border-radius: 4px; flex-grow: 0; height: 14px; width: 60px;"></div> </div> </div> <div style="padding: 19% 0;"></div> <div style="display: block; height: 50px; margin: 0 auto 12px; width: 50px;"></div> <div style="padding-top: 8px;"> <div style="color: #3897f0; font-family: Arial,sans-serif; font-size: 14px; font-style: normal; font-weight: 550; line-height: 18px;">View this post on Instagram</div> </div> <p style="color: #c9c8cd; font-family: Arial,sans-serif; font-size: 14px; line-height: 17px; margin-bottom: 0; margin-top: 8px; overflow: hidden; padding: 8px 0 7px; text-align: center; text-overflow: ellipsis; white-space: nowrap;"><a style="color: #c9c8cd; font-family: Arial,sans-serif; font-size: 14px; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal; line-height: 17px; text-decoration: none;" rel="noopener" href="https://www.instagram.com/p/CUdYl01hDbV/?utm_source=ig_embed&amp;utm_campaign=loading" target="_blank">A post shared by MATT WRIGHT - OUTBACK WRANGLER (@mattwright)</a></p> </div> </blockquote> <p><span>“Oh no, he’s wrapped up, here I’ll help you,” he added, as the python wraps himself around the pole and heads towards Wright’s feet.</span></p> <p><span>Matt helps his son untangle the snake from the pole of the house's exterior, before encouraging Banjo to keep pulling the snake back towards the bushes. </span></p> <p>When the snake refuses to budge, Banjo drops the tail and yells, “Oh no, oh no” before running back to his dad.</p> <p>Matt continues to encourage his son, before sweeping him off the ground when the toddler almost puts himself in a dangerous position.</p> <p>“Watch out, he’ll bite ya,” Wright said.</p> <p>“What are we gonna do? Go back and grab the tail. There you go, grab the tail. Two hands! Two hands!”</p> <p>Banjo appears to lose interest in taking the snake back to the bushes, with Wright trying to encourage his son again.</p> <p>“Quick, grab him, he’s going to bite Dad,” Wright jokes.</p> <p>The video was praised by many, with a lot of commenters comparing Matt's relationship with Banjo to the late Steve Irwin's relationship with Bindi.</p> <p>Despite the many positive comments, the wild clip wasn't received well by some.</p> <p>“Normally I love your videos but I’m not a fan of this behaviour. No need to stress the animal just for an Instagram video,” one wrote.</p> <p>“In America they would call child services lol,” another added.</p> <p><em>Image credits: Instagram @mattwright</em></p>

Family & Pets

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From the Red Centre to the green tropics, Australia’s Outback presents a palette like no other

<p><strong>By Reader's Digest, in partnership with APT</strong></p> <p>From the sunburnt sands and ochre-hued escarpments of its Red Centre to the lush green rainforests of Tropical North Queensland, Australia’s Outback packs a punch when it comes to the kaleidoscope of colours on show. <a href="https://www.aptouring.com.au/?utm_source=readersdigest&amp;utm_medium=advertorial&amp;utm_content=20200302_outback2020_readersdigest_native&amp;utm_campaign=outback2020">APT</a> has been operating tours in the Outback for more than 50 years, and are experts in tailoring holidays to showcase the best of each magical region.</p> <p><strong>A world of rainforest and reef</strong></p> <p>In Cape Tribulation, rainforest-clad mountains tumble down to meet the coastline, where pure white sands and turquoise waters dazzle. This is the only place on Earth where two World Heritage-listed sites meet – the Great Barrier Reef and the Daintree Rainforest. The Daintree is the oldest tropical lowland forest in the world and is home to thousands of species of birds, animals and reptiles. Here, giant fan palms, emerald green vines and ancient ferns tangle together, forming a dense rainforest that makes you feel as though you are stepping into Jurassic Park.</p> <p><em style="font-weight: inherit;">On tour</em></p> <p>APT offers an 11-day 4WD adventure through Cooktown &amp; Cape York. Arrive in Cairns and transfer to Port Douglas, where you’ll spend a night at the luxurious Sheraton Grand Mirage Resort. Travel to Mossman Gorge in Daintree National Park and set off on a Dreamtime Gorge Walk. Explore Cape Tribulation and Cooktown then visit Split Rock, an intriguing Indigenous rock art site. Take a helicopter flight into the Steve Irwin Wildlife Reserve before continuing north to the tip of Cape York. Here, set out on a walk to the tip of the peninsula and enjoy a helicopter flight for an aerial perspective on this incredible landscape.</p> <p><strong style="font-style: inherit;">Be moved by the outback’s heart</strong></p> <p>As the light shifts and changes throughout the day, so does the landscape at Uluru – the Outback’s spiritual heart. At sunrise, feel an overwhelming sense of calm as you watch this mighty monolith come to life against a pastel-coloured sky. In the afternoon, Uluru appears as an ochre-brown hue, scored with dark shadows. As the sun begins to set, it bathes the rock in burnt orange, then a series of deeper and darker reds, before it finally fades into charcoal as night falls. Spend a night at the Field of Light and savour dinner under the stars, accompanied by the soothing sounds of the didgeridoo. With Uluru in the background, watch in awe as 50,000 soft lights cover the desert floor behind you.</p> <p><em style="font-weight: inherit;">On tour</em></p> <p>On APT’s 11-day Central to South Explorer tour, start your journey in Uluru, where you’ll embark on a base tour at sunrise and experience a night at the Field of Light. Learn about the history of opal mining in Coober Pedy then travel along the iconic Oodnadatta Track to WIlliam Creek. Take an included scenic flight over spectacular Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre before journeying to Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park. While here, spend two nights at the Ikara Safari Camp – the perfect base for exploring Wilpena Pound National Park. A winery lunch in Adelaide’s Clare Valley is the perfect ending to your journey.</p> <p><strong style="font-style: inherit;">Getting your fill of Lake Eyre</strong></p> <p>Few sights in Australia stir the soul more than that of the normally dry Lake Eyre filling with water and suddenly teeming with life. The lake, properly known as Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre, relies on monumental rains in Queensland and the Northern Territory for water to begin to flow into it. Last year saw the lake reach levels unseen for almost half a century, and it is hoped that 2020’s northern monsoon season will see the region once again alive with fish surging through the rivers that feed Lake Eyre, and its surface thronged with an array of birdlife including hundreds of thousands of pelicans. In a land battling drought and bushfires, the vision of water shimmering on the surface of the lake is life affirming. And it is something to be treasured and celebrated, so take this rare chance to go with the flow.</p> <p><strong><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.413612565445px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7843791/red-centre-2-um.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/5655363ea89d4bf1b0684a7bf50cfbba" /></strong></p> <p><strong>Paradise found amid corals and blooms</strong></p> <p>Stretching over 1,100 kilometres of seemingly untouched coastline, Western Australia’s Coral Coast is a marine paradise like no other. Here, waves lap lazily on pristine white-sand beaches and turtles sweep through sheltered turquoise bays.</p> <p>The crystal-clear waters of Ningaloo Marine Park harbour the world’s largest fringing reef. Beneath the surface, you’ll find dolphins, dugongs, manta rays, and more than 500 species of fish. There’s more to discover on land, where colourful blankets of native wildflowers burst into bloom between August and September along the spectacular Wildflower Way. For a whole new perspective on the region, take to the skies on a helicopter flight over the Dampier Archipelago. The staggering contrast between brilliant white beaches, aquamarine waters, and the rugged red Pilbara landscape is a breathtaking sight – one that can only be experienced from the air.</p> <p><em style="font-weight: inherit;">On tour</em></p> <p>Board the MS Caledonian Sky in Broome and navigate the remote islands of Western Australia’s Coral Coast on a 15-day small ship expedition cruise and 4WD adventure. Discover life below the surface while snorkelling the clear waters of this marine paradise. Disembark in Geraldton and continue the adventure as you explore Kalbarri National Park and the eerie limestone Pinnacles. To finish up your journey, there’s a stay in a luxury eco-tent on the beautiful Rottnest Island.</p> <p style="font-style: inherit; font-weight: inherit;"><em style="font-weight: inherit;">This </em><em>article originally appeared on <a href="mailto:https://www.readersdigest.com.au/travel/from-the-red-centre-to-the-green-tropics-australias-outback-presents-a-palette-like-no-other">Reader's Digest.</a></em></p> <p><em>Photos: Reader’s Digest</em></p>

Domestic Travel

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Travelling on the Ghan makes for a luxury outback experience

<p>Great train journeys have always possessed a romantic attraction, but when you marry that with the mystical allure of Australia’s red heart it becomes a truly extraordinary experience. This captivating combination is ready to be discovered by travellers on<span> </span><a rel="noopener" href="http://www.greatsouthernrail.com.au/" target="_blank">The Ghan</a>.</p> <p>Slicing through the heart of the nation from<span> </span><a rel="noopener" href="http://www.greatsouthernrail.com.au/site/the_ghan.jsp" target="_blank">Adelaide to Darwin</a>, The Ghan provides a unique opportunity to absorb the majesty of the great Australian outback. The sheer scale of the journey stirs the imagination as The Ghan relentlessly ploughs through the remote expanse, while you witness its timeless beauty.</p> <p><strong>A transforming experience</strong></p> <p>The journey from top to bottom takes three days and two nights, giving you ample time to become immersed in the grandeur of the endless ochre and red landscape. Whether it’s the sweeping beauty of the Adelaide Plains, the splendour of the Flinders Ranges or theglorious desert sunsets of the centre, the scenery offers a mesmerising vista. At the same time you have all the comforts of a world class train, with gourmet food and wine, personalised service and cosy, private accommodation on board. The gold and platinum service offers that little bit of extra luxury that is well worth the extra cost.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img src="https://cdn.wyza.com.au/media/1060/ghan_luxury_outback_experience_497x335.jpg" alt="Ghan_luxury_outback_experience" width="497" height="335" /></p> <p><strong>Encounter uniquely Australian attractions</strong></p> <p>For those who feel adventurous, you can break your journey at Alice Springs and enjoy a few days exploring Uluru, Kata Tjuta and Kings Canyon at your leisure, then return to pick up the train journey when it suits.</p> <p>Alternately, you can take shorter packaged off-train excursions within the one journey. These are available at Alice Springs and Katherine, so that you can sample the local aboriginal culture, colonial history and scenic wonders. Options include a desert park tour, cultural experience tours, a cruise on the Katherine River at Nitmiluk gorge, or if you are feeling more adventurous you can take the thrill of a camel trail ride or helicopter tour.</p>

Domestic Travel

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“I love you, Mum”: Mother’s final words from son before tragedy struck

<p>A mother has faced heartache after her son, aged 25, was found dead in the Outback after he’d said “I love you” for the last time.</p> <p>Trent Grose, from Broken Hill in rural New South Wales, was found dead under a tree near Maxwelton in far North Queensland on Sunday. </p> <p>A search launched for Mr Grose two weeks ago when his four-wheel-drive was found broken down near a remote property - just a heartbreaking 17km from where he was found a few weeks later deceased. </p> <p>The 25-year-old told his mother Karen he was driving from Richmond, southwest of Townsville, to Toowoomba, near Brisbane for a job interview at a cattle station.</p> <p>His car battery ran flat and he had little water and no way of getting into contact with anyone for help. </p> <p>Miss Grose said she spoke to her son before he started the 16-hour journey in search of work. </p> <p>She told the<span> </span><a href="https://www.townsvillebulletin.com.au/"><em>Townsville</em><span> </span><em>Bulletin</em></a><span> </span>that the last words she ever heard from her boy were “I love you mum.”</p> <p>“We spoke two weeks ago. It was a general talk about where he was going for work next and what he was doing. We always ended with 'I love you mum',” Ms Grose said.</p> <p>“Trent was a people person with a big heart - he'd do anything for anyone.</p> <p>“(He was) an all round top bloke who was loved by all that knew him.”</p> <p>Police are not treating Mr. Grose’s death as suspicious. </p>

Travel Trouble

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Michelin impossible: Why this outback KFC restaurant is chasing the highest food honour

<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">A KFC restaurant in Alice Springs, Northern Territory is pushing for one of the highest international dining honours available: A Michelin Star.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Sam Edelman, who owns the Alice Springs KFC, told </span><a href="https://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/bangkok-thailand-30-mg-price-2018-1044552979?src=mTnFWWy_AkbDyqiK7wAn_w-1-2&amp;studio=1"><span style="font-weight: 400;">Yahoo News Australia</span></a><span style="font-weight: 400;"> he runs the “most remote KFC in the world” and meets the criteria for the star.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;"> “My store serves people who travel from 500 to 1000km away,” Mr Edelman said.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“That’s part of the criteria - the food is worth a detour, worth a journey to enjoy.”</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Edelman came up with the idea after watching a documentary on Netflix.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">In order to get a Michelin star, the restaurant has to use quality products, have a “mastery of flavour and cooking techniques”, the chefs must have personality, it should be value for money and the food has to be consistent.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">However, the guide for the star has been met with criticism as people think it’s biased towards French cuisine and technique.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">In 2016, it awarded a star to a cheap Singapore street food outlet known for a braised chicken dish in a welcome break from tradition.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Edelman is hoping to get the attention of the Michelin judges to a variety of quality restaurants across Australia.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“It’s a bit of Michelin: Impossible, but let’s make it possible,” he said.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“As I say to my staff sometimes, ‘bucket, why not?’”</span></p>

International Travel

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Why the Kimberley region is an icon of the outback

<p><em>Travel writer David McGonigal shares his insider tips for exploring the stunning WA Kimberley region.</em></p> <p>Few Australian towns have developed more in recent decades than Broome. However, just 10 minutes outside town little has changed in 50,000 years.</p> <p>The colours of the Kimberley are a constant. They are a brilliant pallet of red soil and blue sky, golden beaches and aquamarine sea. So are the strong characters that inhabit this harsh and largely empty landscape. I wrote after my first visit 30 years ago: “It’s a truly beautiful part of the country that in many ways epitomises the image of Australia that Australians like to present to the world.”</p> <p>That hasn’t changed and is more important than ever as the rest of Australia becomes more urbanised. The Kimberley’s main travel season is April to September, when the days are warm and the skies are clear.</p> <p><strong>Kimberley towns</strong><br />Kununurra began in the 1960s as the centre of the Ord River Irrigation Scheme. There’s a <u><a href="http://www.visitkununurra.com/">wide range</a></u> of accommodation options and many charter flights over the Bungle Bungles and Argyle Diamond Mine. These days it is a modern town with full facilities.</p> <p><u><a href="http://www.experiencewyndham.com.au/">Wyndham</a></u> was born as the port for the Halls Creek gold rush in 1886. It is a sleepy town of 800 people on Cambridge Gulf and the view from Five Rivers Lookout is spectacular. </p> <p><u><a href="http://www.hallscreektourism.com.au/">Halls Creek</a></u> is the northern end of the Canning Stock Route and the Tanami Track and an entry point for Wolfe Creek Crater and the Bungle Bungle Range. The nearby ruins of Old Halls Creek date back to the first discovery of gold in WA in 1885 when 15,000 optimists were living here. </p> <p>As its name suggests, Fitzroy Crossing came about from people waiting for the flooded Fitzroy River to drop so it was safe to travel across the causeway. Of course, the inevitable delay required a drink and that gave rise to the 1897 Crossing Inn. Geikie Gorge is close by, but this is also a good base to explore Mimbi Caves as well as Tunnel Creek and Windjana Gorge.</p> <p><u><a href="http://www.derbytourism.com.au/">Derby</a></u>, established in 1883, is the Kimberley’s oldest town and remains an important administrative centre with a population of 4,500. The famed hollow boab prison tree stands about 7km from town. Derby has the Kimberley’s main Royal Flying Doctor Service base.</p> <p><u><a href="http://www.visitbroome.com.au/">Broome</a></u> is one of Australia’s most important tourist towns. Originally a pearling community it now has a wide range of hotels and resorts and tourist operators. Expect to see expensive jewellery such as pearls and Argyle diamonds on display in the shops. You can still ride a camel along Cable Beach and Sun Pictures outdoor picture gardens is always packed on Saturday nights.</p> <p><strong>Travel by road</strong><br />Trans-Kimberley options are either the Great Northern Highway or the Gibb River Road, or ideally both. The highway comes into Broome from the south along Eighty Mile Beach then passes through Derby, Fitzroy Crossing, Halls Creek, Wyndham and Kununurra before becoming the Victoria Highway to Katherine and Darwin. It’s just over 1000km from Broome to Kununurra. The renowned 700km back-country journey along the Gibb River Road begins outside Derby to the south west and ends near Wyndham. The main side trip is up to Kalumburu and/or Mitchell Falls.</p> <p>The dirt road up the Dampier Peninsula from Broome passes by the Aboriginal communities of Beagle Bay (don’t miss seeing the pearl-shell altar in the church), Middle Lagoon and Lombadina before arriving at Cape Leveque and One Arm Point. Sunset at Cape Leveque turns the blood-red ridge behind the white sandy beach to crimson. The Aboriginal-owned resort of <a href="http://www.kooljaman.com.au/">Kooljaman</a> offers five levels of accommodation and a camp ground.</p> <p>Purnululu National Park is the site of the wonderful orange-and-black banded beehive domes of the Bungle Bungle Range. It is only open between April and December and the rough 53km access road can be negotiated only by 4WD vehicles and single-axles off-road trailers. There are no shops in the park but there are scenic flight options.</p> <p>The Gibb River Road heads north from Derby past <a href="http://www.mowanjumarts.com/">Mowanjum Art and Cultural Centre</a> and the old Derby Leprosarium on the way to the turnoff to Windjana Gorge and Tunnel Creek. Like Geikie Gorge these cut through the ancient coral reef of the Napier Range.</p> <p>The whole Gibb River Road is a grand outback experience and the swimming holes, stations (some offer accommodation) and camping sites along the way provide an unforgettable experience. The road has improved a lot in recent years and opens in April or May when the rivers have dropped and Main Roads has graded it to repair the ravages of the Wet.</p> <p>Around midway along the road there’s the turnoff to Kalumburu and the Mitchell Plateau. The 270km road to Kalumburu is only slightly worse than the Gibb River Road – the track out to Mitchell Falls is <em>considerably</em> worse.</p> <p>For National Parks information go to the <u><a href="https://parks.dpaw.wa.gov.au/">official website</a></u>.</p> <p><strong>Aboriginal tourism</strong><br />Since the late, renowned Sam Lowell OAM began taking tours in 1981 the Kimberley has been a great place to discover the unique perspective of the original Australians. That can be done in many ways including staying at the multi-award-winning <a href="http://www.kooljaman.com.au/">Kooljaman</a>.</p> <p>At Geikie Gorge, the <a href="http://www.darngku.com.au/">Darngku Heritage Cruises</a> provides a special insight into Aboriginal heritage and visits places not accessible to the regular visitor. To explore the opportunities <u><a href="http://www.kimberleydreamtimeadventures.com.au/">Kimberley Dreamtime Adventure Tours</a></u> offers several tours out of Broome.</p> <p>Of course, there are also opportunities to buy Aboriginal art in the area where it was created. There are many galleries throughout the Kimberley. Just ask the local tourist offices.</p> <p><strong>Exploration by air</strong><br />The distances in the Kimberley are vast and the population sparse so air travel is a logical option. Two sights are best seen from an aerial perspective: Wolfe Creek Meteorite Crater and Bungle Bungle.</p> <p>The WA government set up the <u><a href="http://www.westernaustralia.com/en/Attraction/Kimberley_Aerial_Highway/56b2690cd5f1565045dac438">Kimberley Aerial Highway</a></u> linking charter flights to ground operator tours.</p> <p>Several cattle stations across the Kimberley welcome fly-in visitors. For remote coastal luxury there’s <u><a href="http://www.farawaybay.com.au/">Faraway Bay</a></u> where you have to fly in because any other access is impractical. The resort takes pride in its cuisine and the setting is superb.</p> <p>The Kimberley overall offers grand settings and a sense of space that is unique. No matter how you travel, time in this special part of Australia reveals much of what makes Australia special.</p> <p>For general information visit <u><a href="http://www.westernaustralia.com/">www.westernaustralia.com</a></u></p> <p>Have you visited the Kimberley region? Join the conversation below.</p> <p><em>Written by David McGonigal. Republished with permission of <span><strong><a href="https://www.wyza.com.au/articles/travel/why-the-kimberley-region-is-an-icon-of-the-outback.aspx">Wyza.com.au.</a></strong></span> </em></p>

International Travel

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The Ghan: A day of surprises in Australia’s outback

<p><em>Justine Tyerman continues her series about The Ghan Expedition, a 2979km four-day, three-night train journey through the ‘Red Centre’ of Australia from Darwin to Adelaide. On Day 3 she explores Coober Pedy’s surreal landscapes, opal mines, underground dwellings and one of the world’s most unique golf courses . . .</em></p> <p>I awoke to a dazzling dawn of gilt-edged clouds and red earth glowing in the early morning sun. There was very little vegetation and the horizon was dead flat, like the Nullarbor Plain that mesmerised me on my Indian Pacific journey earlier in the year.</p> <p>During the night, we crossed the waterless Hugh and Finke rivers. The Finke is believed to be the oldest river system in the world dating back 300 million years. I would love to have seen it in the daylight, or better still been able to jump off the train to watch the grand silver Ghan traverse the bridge over the red, rippled sand of the dry riverbed as shown on many postcards.</p> <p>At mealtimes on the train, a recklessness possessed me as if there was no tomorrow. Usually such a disciplined and abstemious breakfaster, I decided to have lashings of French toast made with nuts and fruit, the best I’ve ever tasted.</p> <p>Soon after, we arrived at Manguri a remote siding literally in the middle of nowhere. This was our disembarkation point where eight coaches were lined up to take passengers on a variety of Coober Pedy excursions.  </p> <p>Our driver Mike was an outstanding guide who filled our 42km drive on a rough, corrugated, unsealed road with a brilliant, informative commentary about all aspects of the area.</p> <p>Halfway between Alice and Adelaide, Coober Pedy’s economy is based on the opal industry and tourism. The population is about 1900 of which 700 are aboriginal. There are 45 different nationalities all of whom live in harmony.</p> <p>The region is the opal capital of the world producing about 70 percent of the global production of this beautiful precious stone. Opals were discovered here in 1915 by a young lad named Willie Hutchison, aged 14, who wandered off from the campsite alone against the strict instructions of his father, a prospector. Willie came back with a sugar bag full of opals and also found water so he was quickly forgiven.</p> <p>Mike pointed south east towards the 23,677 square kilometre-Anna Creek Station, the world's largest working cattle station, 140km from Coober Pedy. And south west towards Maralinga where Britain carried out nuclear bomb tests in the 1960s, and the Woomera Prohibited Area, a 122,000 sq kilometre site declared a prohibited area in 1947. Its remoteness made it an ideal location for rocket research and testing electronic warfare. Important space technology was tested at Woomera that contributed to the 1969 moon landing.</p> <p>“And all around us, there are kangaroos, snakes, goannas, lizards, emus and brumbies,” Mike said with a sweep of his arm. But they were all hiding that day.</p> <p>The landscape was dotted with piles of earth called mullock heaps and bent-over towers above mine shafts where prospectors were excavating in search of opals. There are 2 million mullocks in the Coober Pedy area, with shafts up to 60-70 metres deep so you definitely don’t want to venture off the beaten track here.</p> <p>The towers, known as ‘blowers’, operate like giant vacuum cleaners to suck the earth up the shaft to the surface. They really should be called suckers not blowers.</p> <p>We also saw a number of ‘black lighting rigs’ where miners search tailings using ultra-violet light. When lit up with a black light, opals glow or fluoresce.</p> <p>Our first stop was a viewing point above the Breakaways, a breath-taking, surreal landscape where a series of colourful flat-topped hills or ‘mesa’ appear to have broken free and drifted away from the main plateau of the Stuart Ranges.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img style="width: 500px; height: 335.1593625498008px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7821877/2.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/ffb90522482949f7b910cc72afee98c7" /></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em><span>The breath-taking, surreal Breakaways. </span></em></p> <p>The colours - white, cream, pale pink, orange, mossy green, red, ochre, brown and black – were astonishing, especially when the sun emerged briefly from behind the clouds. The temperature was comparatively cool here after the heat of Darwin, Katherine and Alice Springs.</p> <p>The Breakaways are located in the 15,000-hectare Kanku-Breakaways Conservation Park which belongs to the indigenous Antakirinja people who have inhabited the area, known to them as ‘Umoona’ meaning ‘long life’, for thousands of years.</p> <p>Submerged under an icy inland sea 100-120 million years ago, the region is rich in dinosaur fossils from plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs.  </p> <p>“There’s also rumours of large oil deposits underground here but this is a conservation park so that’s where the oil will stay - underground,” said Mike.</p> <p>The Ghan staff went to great efforts to set up morning tea at the lookout – just in case passengers were hungry or thirsty.</p> <p>Mike had to drag me away from the Breakaways that day, I was so hypnotised by the other-worldly landscape, but the promise of a close-up view finally got me back on the bus. We drove a short distance to rock formations known as ‘Salt and Pepper’ due to their distinctive colours, or ‘Two Dogs Sitting Down’ to the aboriginal people. Nearby was a peaked hill, known as ‘Wati’ (man), the owner of the dogs, and ‘Sleeping Camel’, a site of great significance to Antakirinja.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7821879/image_.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/f9fe68a5f5f74b8a88f8b3903883b92b" /></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>‘Salt and Pepper’ or ‘Two Dogs Sitting Down’.</em></p> <p>Our next stop was the ‘Dog Fence’ built in the 1880s to protect sheep against dingo attacks. Stretching over 5300km through South Australia, Queensland and New South Wales, it’s the longest fence in the world. Costing about $10 million a year to maintain, the fence has saved farmers many more millions in stock losses.</p> <p>The surrounding terrain is called the ‘Moon Plains’ because of their striking resemblance to a lunar landscape. The earth was littered with gypsum which sparkled in the sun.</p> <p>At lunchtime, Mike deposited us at the entranceway to an underground restaurant in an opal mine, our first taste of Coober Pedy’s famous subterranean lifestyle. Before dining, we had an entertaining drilling and fuse-lighting demonstration by an old-timer named George, aged 76.</p> <p>“The average age of an underground miner these days is around 65 so we are an increasingly-rare breed,” he said.</p> <p>After a delicious lunch served at long tables set up in a series of underground tunnels, we visited the Umoona Opal Mine with guide Jacquie who explained the various types of opal from dark to light, and the way they are mounted. A solid piece of opal can be mounted as is, while thinner pieces, called triplets or doublets, are cemented together on a glass backing.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7821880/image_.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/514286bdf1aa48248808d95afd7deb10" /></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>An opal seam in the wall of the mine.</em></p> <p>Opals are valued according to brilliance, darkness, pattern, colour and shape – the more colour, the higher the value. The black crystal opal is the most rare and valuable.</p> <p>Jacquie also explained the history behind the intriguing name of Coober Pedy, and the reason for the underground dwellings.</p> <p>When opals were found here in 1915, miners came in their droves, many living underground to escape the intense heat and cold. Intrigued by this strange practice, the aboriginal people described the unusual living conditions as ‘kupa piti’ meaning ‘white man in a hole’. The name stuck and the settlement became known as Coober Pedy.</p> <p>One of the hottest places in Australia, summer temperatures often reach 45 degrees Celsius with ground temperatures as high as 65 degrees. In the winter, temperatures can plunge to zero. Underground, the temperatures are around 21-24 degrees year-round meaning no heating and cooling are required which allows for very economical living.</p> <p>Seventy percent of Coober Pedy’s population of 1900 live underground in dwellings dug into hillsides. The houses have normal-looking frontages with wet areas usually located near the entrance due to plumbing requirements but the bulk of the living quarters are underground. Each room has at least one airshaft. In the early days, the dwellings were dug out by hand but now modern drilling machinery is used. The house we toured with Jacquie was really spacious and quite luxurious.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7821881/image_.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/0afe6e7898f0490389e7fdf32ac34b8c" /></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>A modern underground house in Coober Pedy. </em></p> <p>If home-owners need extra space, they just tunnel out an extra room or two. No wall, floor or ceiling materials are needed, and there are minimal windows. The sandstone surfaces are painted with a sealer to combat dust and the end product is a warm rose-maroon colour with a swirly marble effect.</p> <p>“One of the great bonuses of building your house underground in Coober Pedy is that you might find enough opals to finance your construction project,” Jacquie said. There’s little risk of collapse because the gypsum in the rock makes it very strong.</p> <p>In days gone by, explosives used to be so commonplace in Coober Pedy, miners bought them from the local store along with their bread and milk. The drive-in theatre had a sign that read:  ‘The use of explosives are not permitted in the theatre.’ But there was always some wise-crack who let off dynamite on New Year’s Eve, Jacquie said.</p> <p>Later Mike took us on a tour of the town, passing the school with 300 students, 30 teachers and the only swimming pool and library in town, the drive-in theatre, shooting range, race course, power station and a 20-bed hospital where specialists fly in once a month. Pregnant women go to Port Augusta to give birth.</p> <p>We also visited the town’s 18-hole golf course. Officially one of the top 10 most unique golf courses in the world, it’s totally grassless and the ‘greens’ are oiled earth. There’s artificial green turf on which to tee off but otherwise the entire course is dirt and sand. The locals certainly have a sense of humour. A large sign reads: ‘Keep off the grass.’</p> <p>When it’s too hot to play during the day, night golf with illuminated courses and fluorescent balls is a popular option.</p> <p>The course is the only one in the world with reciprocal rights to play at St Andrews but there’s a catch – golfers are only allowed to play there in December-January, mid-winter in Scotland.</p> <p>With an annual rainfall of around 100ml a year, water is a precious resource in Coober Pedy. Water used to be trucked in but since 1967, the town has had the benefit of an artesian water source and a desalinisation plant.</p> <p>The town is self-sufficient in electricity with wind turbines, solar power and diesel back-up.</p> <p>Despite the heat, this harsh arid region has been the location of a number of major movies including Mad Max III, Priscilla Queen of the Desert, Ground Zero and Pitch Black.</p> <p>Our last stop before heading back to The Ghan was the exquisite St Elijah’s Serbian Orthodox Church built underground in 1993. Guide Peter showed us around his ornately-decorated church tunnelled deep into a hillside.</p> <p>In the 1990s, the Serbian community numbered around 150 but there were other Orthodox people of different nationalities as well, many of whom used to travel to Adelaide for weddings, baptisms and other religious ceremonies. So they decided to build their own church.</p> <p>The main body of the rectangular building was tunnelled using a square machine but for the ceiling, a rounded machine was used to create the beautiful cinquefoil arch, a striking feature of the church. Decorated with icons from around Australia, New Zealand and Serbia, the stained glass windows and carvings are stunning.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img style="width: 333.3333333333333px; height: 500px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7821882/image_.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/8789b1f0b53e4d678c6731d335d377f8" /></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>The stained glass windows and carvings at St Elijah’s Serbian Orthodox Church church are stunning.</em></p> <p>Despite the bumpy ride back ‘home’, a few passengers nodded off on the bus.</p> <p>As we neared the train, Mike took us to the opposite side from where passengers usually embark and disembark for a rare photo opportunity of the full-length Ghan in the desert, without hundreds of people in the way. A magnificent sight, one that will stay with me forever.</p> <p>In the distance, I noticed a fire near the train. I drew it to Mike’s attention but he just winked. The fire in question turned out to be a sunset bonfire with canapés and drinks against a backdrop of the lantern-lit Ghan, our home for the last three days. Such a delightful surprise for passengers on our last night, and a perfect way to farewell The Ghan.</p> <p>Standing around the fire in the dusty clothes we’d worn all day made for a wonderfully informal occasion where everyone chatted about the highlights of their Ghan experience. As I looked around at the animated faces of people who had been strangers a few short days ago, I had a deep sense of happiness and joie de vivre.</p> <p>Lanterns on railway sleepers lit the way back to my carriage where Aaron was waiting patiently in the chilly evening to tick his list and count heads.</p> <p>I had a wonderful time over dinner with three other women who had by now become my good friends. We toasted the merits of solo travel and decided there was no better way to meet like-minded people.</p> <p>Our last dinner was superb – prawn and pork dumplings with sesame seed salad and orange caviar followed by tender lamb back strap with a dessert of chocolate and peanut butter delice with macadamia toffee brittle and berry sorbet.</p> <p>Later in the evening, restaurant manager Nick joined us in the bar and recited a beautiful poem he had written about The Ghan. It brought tears to my eyes.</p> <p>As I settled to sleep, rocked by the familiar motion of the train, the thought of disembarking in Adelaide the next day brought a lump to my throat...</p> <p><em>To be continued . . .</em></p> <p><em>FACTBOX:</em></p> <p><em>* The Ghan Expedition is a 2979km four-day, three-night train journey through the ‘Red Centre’ of Australia from Darwin to Adelaide.</em></p> <p><em>*Justine travelled courtesy of international rail specialists Rail Plus and Great Southern Rail.</em></p> <p><em>* Visit <a href="https://www.railplus.co.nz/australia-by-rail/australias-great-train-journeys/the-ghan-expedition/ghan-expedition-prices-book.htm"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Rail Plus</strong></span></a> for more information on The Ghan and <span><a href="https://www.railplus.co.nz/great-train-journeys/">https://www.railplus.co.nz/great-train-journeys/</a> </span>for other epic train adventures around the world.</em></p> <p><em>*A veteran of many rail journeys organised through Rail Plus, I’ve also travelled on the Indian Pacific (see my series of four stories <a href="https://www.oversixty.com.au/travel/domestic-travel/what-it-s-like-travelling-across-australia-on-board-the-indian-pacific"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>here</strong></span></a>); and the <a href="https://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/domestic-travel/a-day-on-the-tranzalpine"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>TranzAlpine</strong></span></a></em><em><a href="https://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/domestic-travel/a-day-on-the-tranzalpine">.</a> </em></p> <p><em>*Rail Plus has a dedicated team of experts to advise you on Great Train Journeys all around the world including the <a href="https://www.railplus.co.nz/great-train-journeys/the-blue-train/prices-book.htm"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Blue Train</strong></span></a> in South </em><span><em>Africa</em></span><em> that runs between Cape Town's monolithic Table Mountain and the jacaranda-lined streets of Pretoria. </em></p>

International Travel

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Where to find unexpected art in outback NSW

<p>Discover incredible artworks – both ancient and modern – in Outback New South Wales.</p> <p><strong>The Living Desert Sculpture Symposium</strong></p> <p>Set on a hill about 10 kilometres outside of Broken Hill, 12 huge, abstract sandstone sculptures rise dramatically into the sky. The installation was unveiling in 1993 and stands largely unchanged, sort of like an Antipodean Stonehenge. The works were created by well-known international artists who carved the sculptures into the blocks on-site.</p> <p><strong>Silverton</strong></p> <p>The tiny town of Silverton has a permanent population of less than 50, yet is a thriving arts hub. There are a number of art galleries spread throughout town, with works ranging from brightly painted utes in the yard to classic landscapes in oil. In fact, the whole town looks like the set of a movie and there’s even a whole museum dedicated to the film Mad Max, which was filmed nearby.</p> <p><strong>Broken Hill</strong></p> <p>The unofficial capital of the Outback, Broken Hill is an historic silver mining town that also has a strong artistic tradition. It was the home of the Brushmen of the Bush, a group of five artists (Pro Hart, Eric Minchin, Jack Absalom, John Pickup and Hugh Schulz) who collaborated together. There are a number of galleries dedicated to them and other local artists that host excellent exhibitions. The Pro Hart Outback Prize is an annual competition hosted by the Broken Hill Regional Gallery that attracts some of the best artists in the country.</p> <p><strong>Mutawintji National Park</strong></p> <p>The ancient Mutawintji National Park is around 130 kilometres northeast of Broken Hill. It is of special significance to the local indigenous people and rock art here dates back some 8,000 years. A local indigenous guide can take you into the restricted Historic Site, home to one of the state’s best collections of Aboriginal art, including rock art, hand stencils and engraving.</p> <p><strong>Lightning Ridge</strong></p> <p>Another small community with an oversized artistic tradition, the mining town of Lightning Ridge is home to a number of galleries showing contemporary works, indigenous art and spaces for emerging artists. The most unique gallery is housed in an abandoned mine shaft 12 metres below the ground. Chambers of the Black Hand is run by artists and miner Ron Canlin and the walls are covered with carvings and paintings of everything from ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs to modern cartoon characters.</p> <p>Have you been to any of these places?</p>

International Travel

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An outback safari in Broken Hill

<p><em><strong>Over60 travel writer Lucy Jones heads to Outback NSWon a three-day trip with Tri State Safaris visiting Broken Hill, Menindee and White Cliffs.</strong></em></p> <p>In 1928 a newly married Catherine Alice Simpson arrived in Menindee, a tiny outpost in the far west of New South Wales on the banks of the Darling River. She was 21 years old, barely five foot tall and was to move into a small house behind the post office along with her husband, the postmaster. It didn’t rain once for the next three years.</p> <p>Almost 90 years later, I find myself standing in front of the very same post office. Catherine was my great grandmother. Her memories of Menindee seemed to consist mostly of sweeping – endless sweeping – in an attempt to keep the all-pervasive red desert dust out of the house. Towards the end of the drought, the dust was piled so high around town that it was possible to walk right over the paddock fences.</p> <p>I’m here with Tri State Safaris on a three-day Outback Exposure tour. Guide Geoff Spangler is at the wheel of our comfortable safari vehicle and proves to be an endless font of local knowledge and amusing anecdotes. I also suspect he has some sort of bionic vision. It was not uncommon for him to spot a perfectly camouflaged lizard no bigger than your hand while flying along at 100 kilometres an hour.</p> <p>We tend to think of the ‘outback’ as covering only central Australia and it’s easy to forget that it actually stretches across six states. This corner of NSW, close to the border of South Australia, is something of a forgotten gem. In the mid-1800s towns like Menindee and nearby Wilcannia were effectively the edge of the known universe for European settlers in eastern Australia. They were thriving outposts for travellers and settlers, and are still dotted with grand sandstone public buildings, though most now stand empty.</p> <p>The region is most famous as the jumping off point for ill-fated explorers Burke and Wills. Burke, the leader of the expedition, was a military man and police officer. Wills was a scientist and surveyor. Neither had the kind of experience that would seem necessary for a 3,250-kilometre trek across the continent, through some of the most inhospitable territory on the planet. But it was the great Victorian age of exploration and they set off with an admirable, if foolhardy, confidence. The group left Menindee in 1860 and was never seen again.</p> <p>For all its dust and ferocious heat, the desert here is remarkably beautiful. A prolonged drought had been broken some months before and everything is (relatively) lush and green. Thousands of delicate paper daisies line the road. Emus and kangaroos are plentiful, prompted to breed in greater numbers by the plentiful water. The Menindee Lakes are filling rapidly and water is pouring down the Darling River. We board the small River Lady boat for a cruise on Lake Wetherell, where the contrast is staggering. In March 2016 the lake was completely dry, but now it’s over capacity and we are winding between the ghostly trunks of trees reaching from metres of water.</p> <p>After spending the night on the banks of the Darling, we head north for the opal mining town of White Cliffs. You know a place is hot when residents choose to burrow their homes into the hillside to escape the scorching sun. The town is consistently one of the hottest places in the country and during summer daytime temperatures rarely dip below the high 30s. In January 1973 the mercury hit a record 48.6 degrees, which is enough to make anyone want to live underground.</p> <p>Thankfully, the pool at the White Cliffs Underground Motel is always refreshingly cool. The hotel itself is a winding labyrinth of narrow corridors that open out into high-ceilinged rooms carved right out of the rock. Temperatures inside stay at a comfortable 22 to 23 degrees all year round, but don’t expect any phone reception of Wi-Fi inside.</p> <p>White Cliffs is a town built, quite literally on opal. It was first discovered in 1884 by a pair of stockhands out kangaroo shooting and soon more than 2,000 miners were digging into the white sandstone in search of the glittering stones. In 1902, 140,000 pounds of opals were mined and sold. But its heyday was short lived. The First World War called the miners away and brought an end to trade with Germany, then one of the world’s largest opal markets, and the town never really recovered.</p> <p>A few hardy prospectors remain and one, Graeme, takes us down his mine. He spends as much time as possible below ground, carving out the rock by hand with the passionate fervour of a gambler on the cusp of his next big win. Which, I guess, he essentially is.</p> <p>On the way back to Broken Hill the next day, there’s one more stop. The ancient Mutawintji National Park is of special significance to the local indigenous people and rock art here dates back some 8,000 years. Indigenous guide Mark takes us into the restricted Historic Site, home to one of the state’s best collections of Aboriginal art. It’s humbling to think of how little time we have inhabited this continent and how much has come before us.</p> <p><em>*The three-day Outback Exposure tour with Tri State Safaris departs from Broken Hill and is priced from $1,380 per person twin share. Find more at, tristate.com.au.</em></p> <p>Have you ever been to this beautiful part of Australia?</p> <p><em>Image credit: Lucy Jones</em></p>

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Uluru Camel Cup: A true blue Aussie outback event

<p>Did you know there are more than one million wild camels running around the Australian outback? So suddenly, a whole racing festival dedicated to these ships of the desert doesn’t seem so strange…</p> <p>The Uluru Camel Cup started in 2012 and for the first year attracted mainly locals living in the town of Yulara, the closest settlement to Uluru. It’s now grown to one of the most popular events on the Northern Territory’s calendar and draws spectators from all over the world. This year, the cup will be held on May 27.</p> <p>The festivities begin on Friday night at the Outback Pioneer Hotel &amp; Bar. The evening starts with an Aussie buffet dinner, including a spit roast, followed by live music (mainly country), dancing and entertainment. The highlight of the night is the Camel Cup Calcutta, where you can bid on your favourite camel for the big race on Saturday. There’s no gambling at the track itself, so you’ll need to get your bets in the night before.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/yeK8Qku_FPU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen=""></iframe></p> <p>On race day, the camels stretch their legs with qualifying races before the three big ticket shows: the Dash for Cash, Plate Race and the Uluru Camel Cup itself. The camels aren’t trained racers. Usually, they are carrying tourists on tours of Uluru and Kata Tjuta at a slow walking pace. Their handlers will put them through a few races before the big day, but there’s really no way to know how the race will turn out.</p> <p>As with everything in the outback, the weather has a big role to play. One year, heavy rains made the track so wet that organisers decided that it wasn’t safe for jockeys to ride. No problem – the camels just ran on their own.</p> <p>Off the track, there’s plenty of action as well. Punters dress up to compete in the Fashions on the Field parade and there are stock whip demonstrations, wheelbarrow races and even a camel dung throwing competition. The weekend wraps up with the glittering Frock Up &amp; Rock Up Gala Ball, held under the stars with a red sand dance floor and music till the early hours.</p> <p>Have you ever been to the Uluru Camel Cup? Share your experience in the comments below.</p>

International Travel

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Why you should visit Arnhem Land right now

<p>Covering almost 100,000 square kilometres in the northeaster corner of the Northern Territory, Arnhem Land is a vast and mysterious wilderness that’s one of the country’s hidden gems.</p> <p><strong>It’s largely undiscovered</strong></p> <p>Tens of thousands of tourists visit Kakadu, the best known national park in the Top End, ever year. Arnhem Land welcomes only a fraction of that, so there’s a good chance you’ll have many places all to yourself. In Arnhem Land intrepid travellers can really get away from it all and, provided they are fully self sufficient, head out on some of the region’s remote roads for a one of a kind experience.</p> <p><strong>The fishing is unbeatable</strong></p> <p>Fancy catching a barramundi that’s almost as big as you are? The NT is renowned for its barra fishing, but many places around the state can be crowded with locals and tourists alike. In Arnhem Land there are essentially no crowds and no one to compete with for that perfect catch. Stay in a remote fishing lodge or campsite and spend your days puttering around the estuaries looking for barra, queenfish, giant trevally, mackerel and more.</p> <p><strong>You can mmerse yourself in indigenous culture</strong></p> <p>The Yolngu people of Arnhem Land have an ancestry dating back more than 50,000 years, making it one of the oldest living cultures on the planet. Their culture remains strong with a fascinating belief system, art and music, and many operators are now introducing them to visitors. You will be welcomed into the local community and learn about language, lore, kinship and their connection with the land.</p> <p><strong>It's home to unique wildlife</strong></p> <p>This untouched wilderness is home to plenty of wildlife that you won’t see anywhere else in the country. They are generally pretty small, but keen spotters should be able to see some including the Arnhem rock-rat, black wallaroo, central rock-rat, carpentarian rock-rat, kakadu dunnart, central pebble-mound mouse and kakadu pebble-mound mouse. It's also a fantastic birdwatching destination with up to 200 species to be seen across different environments from swamp and estuaries to savannah woodland, coastal mangroves and offshore coral cays.</p> <p>Have you ever been to Arnhem land? Share your experience in the comments below. </p>

International Travel

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I rediscovered Australian history travelling through the outback

<p><em><strong>Anne Sinclair, 68, was born in England but spent most of her youth in Darwin, Northern Territory. Now in a position to travel and explore the world, Anne looks forward to sharing her personal experience and encourages others to step out and have fun.   </strong></em></p> <p>Where to begin? Do I mention the fact that at school, which now seems like a life time ago… I was thoroughly excited to learn the history of Australia. Our early explorers like Burke and Wills; then the poetic writings of Banjo Patterson and Henry Lawson. How refreshingly Australian – through and through!</p> <p>Well, all I can say now is... Australian history is waiting for you to re-discover.</p> <p>Over five weeks (in June 2016) I have been most fortunate to be motoring through our great states of Queensland, New South Wales and portions of Victoria. Just tippets I know – but the overflow of historical events in these regions leaves a taste of pride. Pride for the astounding and outstanding courage shown by the early immigrants and all pioneer explorers.</p> <p>From the shining gem fields, the glittering gold mines, small towns boasting their birth of great politicians, writers and celebrated movie and theatre actors alike – it’s all here. If this is not enough to use as a drawn card – Aces high and all – the locals proudly speak of and display their beautiful heritage towns and cities – just begging you to enjoy your time here, there and everywhere! After all, it’s your Australia!</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="497" height="280" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/34254/3_497x280.jpg" alt="3 (142)"/></p> <p>Travelling along the Tropic of Capricorn and heading inland from Rockhampton, you will be introduced not only to the sapphires, rubies and sparkling gems on offer, but notorious bushrangers such as Patrick and Jimmy Kenniff were renown in this area. While their home was Augathella, their resting places are now Dutton Park and Charters Towers Cemeteries, Queensland. Augathella also proudly display their rightful ownership of the ‘Smiley’ stories. Author Neville Ramond wrote stories of his childhood friend Didy ‘Smiley’ Creevey. The theme song was even top of the ‘hit parade’ on the wireless. Locals also remember ‘Chips’ Rafferty as a young shearer on the Nive Downs Station.</p> <p>Seeing the vastness of our great Australia is likened to a passionate reminder for me – a reminder of the forthright nature of the heroic people who shaped our country and styled our future.</p> <p>At Barcaldine – we are reminded of the Great Shearers Strike. The plaque installed here does actually commemorate the 125th Anniversary and was aptly donated by the Australian Workers Union.</p> <p>This Great Shearers Strike saw shearers down their tools – demanding better working conditions and for the ‘recognition of unionism’. Many of the thirteen men (the Strike leaders) after spending three years in hard labour as prisoners’ – had then become predominant figures in our history and its continuing story. Brave men!</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="499" height="279" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/34255/4_499x279.jpg" alt="4 (122)"/></p> <p>Freedom without Dishonour, inscribed on this sign, highlights the great pride we should all feel for these gallant shearers.</p> <p>Again, re-shaping our great nation – we meet Captain Starlight – a man whose legend is largely contested, but was believed to have weaved his magical contribution in these parts of Australia too. A cattle rustler extraordinaire credited with the theft of over 1000 head of cattle and one white bull. The team of rustlers had to move the herd from Queensland to South Australia to sell and make their fortune. But, Harry Redford (Starlight) decided, midway during the trek, to sell the white bull for much needed supplies – and this became his downfall. Caught soon after, and placed before the court ... the jury voted Starlight, ‘not guilty’ to a stunned judge. Such interesting historical information – do these stories of anarchy shape our nation?</p> <p>These tales go on and on...</p> <p>And, <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="https://www.oversixty.com.au/travel/domestic-travel/2016/12/anne-sinclair-on-discovering-the-sapphire-gemfields/">close to the Gemfields in Central Queensland</a></strong></span> – around the Tropic of Capricorn – we can marvel at the stone pitching or rock-reinforced dams at 12 Mile Dam, on the road to Isisford. Constructed in 1892, the 12 Mile Dams’ use of stone for building is believed to be one of the oldest techniques known. The pioneers of Australia however, had to make do with whatever material they could get their hands on. This stone pitching dam shows such splendid examples of craftsmanship, including I think... grace and design. The stone pitching causes water to be stored in an adjacent dam.</p> <p>Any excess of water had a natural by wash, relieving pressure which might have washed the dam away.</p> <p>The views on offer at one of the many lookout positions at Mt Morgan, still in Central Queensland – is described as ‘a dramatic landscape’. The Arthur Timms lookout – displays an historical vision of a grand monument to this Gold Mining town, and it’s evident and recorded support to Australia and its industry. The main stack of this magical creation was completed in 1905 – making it Australia’s tallest free standing brick chimney. Mt Morgan is bursting with exciting history.</p> <p>There is so much more out there – so many interesting stories of heroism, patriotic contributions to the true ‘Aussie spirit’.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="500" height="500" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/34256/5_500x500.jpg" alt="5 (114)"/></p> <p>From a small grave tucked in from the highway, near Anakie, in Queensland. The grave is that of a Piano Tuner dating back to his death by drowning, in 1906. The head stone reads ‘Friends, you have passed me by in this lonesome grave for this past half-hundred years, where I laughed my last and wept my final tears’ – Taman Shud.</p> <p>To the Prisoner of War relic camp in Cowra, New South Wales. Cowra’s passion for peace and international understanding was officially recognised when the town was awarded the Australian World Peace Bell. World Peace Day commemorations are held on the third Tuesday in September, each year. The POW Camp – gone but definitely not forgotten – outlines the heroic actions of not only the guards but the support given by some of the Italian prisoners once WWII was declared as, over! The List of the Formal Declarations of War – from 1939 to 1945 – for me, reads as a shameful mess. A message of shame.</p> <p>So, this is just a sneak preview of what you have on offer if you take the first step. Fuel up the van – map in hand, and head in-land to discover your Australian legacy.</p> <p>There is so so much more. And, I am only hoping that I will find more of these amazing unique, hidden, magical, historical treasures. Talk about exciting your own spirit of discovery – go and search your Australia, because its history is there... waiting for you!</p> <p><em><strong>Do you have a travel story to share? <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://www.oversixty.com.au/community/contributor/community-contributor/">Click here</a></span> to share your story with Over60 today. </strong></em></p>

International Travel

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Why this town is the opal of the Aussie dessert

<p>Coober Pedy is a different world.</p> <p>In fact, it looks so much like a far-off desert planet that it has stood in for Mars in a series of Hollywood blockbusters. The pink sandstone formations rising out of the red dirt, framed by a sapphire blue sky, create an ethereal beauty easily mistaken for outer space.</p> <p>Dotted around the 100-year-old mining town, halfway between Adelaide and Alice Springs, are the abandoned props from those films: a dilapidated spaceship here, paper mache aliens there. The eerie celestial monuments punctuate the red streets alongside discarded mining equipment and weathered opal shop signs.</p> <p>Welcome to the opal capital of the world and the strangest town in Australia.</p> <p>Coober Pedy’s heyday is well behind it and it seems frozen in the 80s – the last opal boom. Mining has declined sharply since the 90s, as the old guard dies off and the town transitions into its new life as an offbeat tourist attraction.</p> <p>But why would tourists travel into the guts of the Australian desert to visit a mining town past its peak? Perhaps to see for themselves the most peculiar part of all, and the thing most Australians know about Coober Pedy: people here live underground.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/34069/image__498x245.jpg" alt="Image_ (98)"/></p> <p><strong>Digging it</strong></p> <p>It gets hot in Coober Pedy, really hot. The kind of heat that beats down on you, and then blows around you like you’re standing in a convection oven.</p> <p>And it doesn’t make for a lively streetscape. On a 50 degree day – yes, they have those here – the whole town shuts down as people hunker down in “dugouts”.</p> <p>Literally built into the side of the red and white mounds rising out of the otherwise the barren plains, dugouts can be recognised by the thin pipes sprouting from the rocky knolls. They’re for ventilation  and are covered in mesh so snakes don’t drop down into the living room. The wide, older-style air shafts have been phased out because drunk miners used to fall into them walking home from the pub.</p> <p>“The old miners, when they came here, they realised they couldn’t live in a tin shed or a tent because you’d die, it’s too hot,” says miner John Dunstan, who’s been in the opal game for over 50 years.</p> <p>“A lot of the old original dugouts, the miners actually tunnelled down a little drive into their mine and lived in there … later on they started building underground homes and it’s the same principle – just a tunnel going into the hill and then some rooms.”</p> <p><strong>Life underground</strong></p> <p>About 65 per cent of the 1800 to 3000 people in town (much of the population travels, so it’s hard to get an accurate reading) live in dugouts. While many older ones are cramped, narrow spaces that would send a claustrophobic’s heart rate north, most of the modern ones are large, open and styled like any modern home.</p> <p>“We’ve got four different doors you can get out of our place – there’s plenty of light, plenty of windows,” says Mr Dunstan.</p> <p>Walking into a dugout on a 40 degree day, it’s easy to understand exactly why people want to live underground. It’s the kind of heat relief you get walking into an air-conditioned shopping centre: so noticeable that out-of-towners make an audible sigh of relief.</p> <p>Generally, heating or cooling isn’t needed – it stays about 25 degrees during summer scorchers and winter nights when it drops to minus two. It can be 36 degrees at midnight and residents sleep with a doona.</p> <p>The older-style dugouts were built by hand. Explosives tore through rocks and homeowners would then pick and shovel them out. These days, tunnelling machines do the work and businesses trade on building them, although there’s not that much space for new homes – there are only so many rock formations left to carve out.</p> <p>The bedrooms, usually at the back of the house, are so dark that dugout residents keep a torch next to their bed in case of power outages (which happen frequently in summer, thanks to the above-ground residents thrashing their air conditioners). Cool, dark and silent, any Coober Pedian will tell you it’s the best night’s sleep you’ll ever have.</p> <p>“You don’t actually know dark until you’ve been in a dugout at night,” teacher Elyse Kowald says.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/34070/image__498x245.jpg" alt="Image_ (99)"/></p> <p><strong>It literally pays to renovate in Coober Pedy</strong></p> <p>Everybody here bristles at the suggestion that dugouts are claustrophobic.</p> <p>Real estate agent Misty Mance, of Lin Andrews Real Estate (the only agency in town), regularly sells dugouts and says people quickly fall in love with life underground.</p> <p>“I had a family earlier in the year, when they first came to town their little boy, about three or four, was very scared, he didn’t want to go underground,” she says.</p> <p>“Two months ago they bought a family dugout from me and their kids love it… it was just that initial taking him to friend’s houses, getting him used to being underground, and now the little fella won’t look back.”</p> <p>Ms Mance says real estate has taken a bit of a dip in recent years as the opal boom has wound down. You can pick up a dugout anywhere from $130,000 to $250,000.</p> <p>But houses here can actually make you money. When Mr Dunstan was renovating his home (by digging out new rooms from the side of the rock) he found an $85,000 opal – simply because his wife asked for a pantry.</p> <p>Dugouts actually make better use of space than an above ground home, because if you need to fit a bulky TV cabinet or sofa, you can just blow out a customised hole in the wall.</p> <p><strong>Opal dreams</strong></p> <p>Since 1915, people have been looking for opal in Coober Pedy. After World War II, a flood of European miners came, trying their luck on the opal fields. And you need luck to find opals.</p> <p>Opal mining is so difficult and relies on such chance that companies don’t bother with Coober Pedy. If they tried to mine here, they would go broke. Opal mining is exclusively the domain of hard-working individuals.</p> <p>But the lifetime miners – those who witnessed the town’s booming nightclub and 24-hour restaurant days – have gotten old. And despite a big resurgence in opal prices, due to interest from China and India, they rarely pass the difficult trade down to their kids.</p> <p>“Over the last 20 years, we’ve had hardly any new opal miners coming to town; it’s mainly us older blokes, still hanging on,” says Mr Dunstan. </p> <p>Dimitrois “Jimmy the runner” Nikoloudis, a lifetime miner known to all in town, believes the “golden age of Coober Pedy” mining is long gone.</p> <p>“In my years, the average mining age would have been something like 25 years of age. The average today would probably be 69-70,” Mr Nikoloudis says.</p> <p>“It has become a tourist attraction, about 10 per cent for miners and 90 per cent for the tourists. The mining? It’s just history now, we talk about it.”</p> <p><em>Kirsten Robb travelled to Coober Pedy courtesy of SA Tourism</em></p> <p><em>Written by Kirsten Robb. First appeared on <a href="https://www.domain.com.au/advice/why-coober-pedy-is-the-opal-of-the-australian-desert-20161215-gtbrqe/"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Domain.com.au</span></strong></a>.</em></p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/11/the-strangest-town-in-australia/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>This might be the strangest town in Australia</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2017/02/a-day-in-the-life-of-an-outback-postie/">A day in the life of an outback postie</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/08/10-free-things-to-do-in-darwin/"><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>10 free things to do in Darwin</strong></span></em></a></p>

International Travel

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A day in the life of an outback postie

<p><strong><em>Travel writer Christina Pfeiffer joins a postie who doubles as a tour guide during her visit to the heart of South Australia.</em></strong></p> <p>I'm bouncing along a dusty road in a four-wheel-drive mail truck with outback postman Peter Rowe. The mailbags in the back are bulging with letters and parcels addressed to residents of the remote outback stations and towns we are about to visit.</p> <p>Twice a week, Rowe and his son, Derek, take turns to drive the 644-kilometre round trip and fortunately, more often than not, their truck is filled with adventurous tourists eager to experience a day in the outback with a postman.</p> <p>The tour starts from the multicultural opal mining community of Coober Pedy. Rowe arrived in town more than 30 years ago to dig for opals and his mail-run commentary is peppered with memories about the good old days.</p> <p>As we drive off, he points out rocky ridges at the edge of town that conceal sprawling underground mansions.</p> <p>"Some of these underground homes are really posh; they have swimming pools, gyms, solid gold fittings in the bathrooms and there's one with ensuite bathrooms attached to every bedroom," he says.</p> <p>Just out of Coober Pedy, the countryside is desolate and sunburnt. We stop at a section of the longest fence in the world, the 5300-kilometre dingo fence. It was built to keep dingoes out of sheep-farming country and each section is maintained by a different contractor.</p> <p>Further along the dirt highway, we leave a cloud of dust in our wake as the truck's wheels spin through the Moon Plains. Rowe tells us the rocky landscape abounds with 120-million-year-old marine fossils, remnants from a time when this brown, barren area was at the bottom of a freezing polar ocean.</p> <p>This stark landscape has captured the imagination of filmmakers and the Moon Plains featured in movies such as Red Planet and Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome.</p> <p>Adding to the other-worldly ambience are abandoned movie props, such as a huge alien spaceship which sits in front of the Opal Cave underground complex.</p> <p>Every few kilometres we pass floodway warning signs that look completely out of place along dry, dusty roads. Incongruous they may be but these signs are not to be ignored – rain falling 20 kilometres away can turn dry creek beds into torrents.</p> <p>Regular rainfall is uncommon but when it rains the wildflowers go berserk. Once every few years the desert transforms into a colourful kaleidoscope of blooming flora.</p> <p>Our first mail stop is Mount Barry Station, where the lean cattle are some of the healthiest animals in Australia.</p> <p>These cattle walk 10 kilometres a day, nibbling on nutritious saltbush while searching for water.</p> <p>By comparison, cattle on the east coast require up to four times the amount of feed in order to receive the same nutrition, thus building up more fat.</p> <p>At another station we're met by a young woman who presents Rowe with a Bundaberg rum bottle filled with mum's home-made tomato sauce.</p> <p>As we approach the entrance to a third station we avoid 25 kilometres of dirt road to the station homestead by sliding a large parcel under a cattle grid near the entrance.</p> <p>As the day passes, the desert reveals russet landscapes highlighted by narrow carpets of green and creeks with eccentric names such as Giddi Giddinna.</p> <p>Eagles swoop to seize scurrying marsupials, emus run across the desert while sulphur-crested cockatoos soar above us.</p> <p>After stopping at several stations, the bulk of the mail is unloaded at the Oodnadatta Post Office and Pink Roadhouse, a legendary outback stop in a town with a population of less than 200.</p> <p>But even in a small town in the middle of the outback there's a good chance of bumping into an interesting character or two, such as proprietor Lynnie Plate.</p> <p>Plate and her husband walked from Alice Springs to Oodnadatta in 1975 – accompanied by a few camels, horses and donkeys – and have lived here ever since.</p> <p>But fame in the outback comes at a price. "I went for a holiday to Melbourne recently. It was so nice to sit in a cafe without being recognised," she sighs.</p> <p>We move on to William Creek. Browns, yellows, lime greens and yellow flowering darling lilies blur past. At Algebuckina Creek, we stop to look at the decommissioned iron railway bridge once used by the old Ghan Railway.</p> <p>Ruins of railway huts, sidings and telegraph stations from the old Ghan are sprinkled across the desert. At Edwards Creek you can see the remains of the ticket office, waiting room and stationmaster's house.</p> <p>William Creek, Australia's smallest town, sits within the world's largest working cattle station, the 34,000-square-kilometre Anna Creek Station.</p> <p>At last count, the town had a population of 10, a ramshackle pub, a few weatherboard houses, a dusty nine-hole golf course and the Dingo Cafe.</p> <p>The walls and ceilings of the William Creek Hotel – the only watering hole for 160 kilometres – are plastered with business cards, bank notes, old caps, bras and T-shirts left behind by travellers. Before I leave, I pin my own business card to the wall, wondering whether it will be there the next time I visit.</p> <p>Have you visited outback South Australia before? Share your experience with us in the comments below.</p> <p><em>Written by Christina Pfeiffer. First appeared on <a href="http://www.stuff.co.nz/"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stuff.co.nz</span></strong></a>.</em></p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.com.au/travel/domestic-travel/2016/06/8-outback-destinations-every-aussie-should-visit/"></a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/08/10-free-things-to-do-in-darwin/">10 free things to do in Darwin</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/04/driving-the-spectacular-stuart-highway/">Driving the spectacular Stuart Highway</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/11/the-strangest-town-in-australia/">This might be the strangest town in Australia</a></strong></em></span></p>

International Travel

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10 outback getaways offering comfort and style

<p>Not so long ago, comfort and style weren't synonymous with an outback destination or experience. Fortunately for those who like their creature comforts and have a sense of adventure, there is an increasing number of destinations off the beaten track that provide everything the most discerning traveller expects.</p> <p>To be sure, the accommodation isn't always five stars but the astonishing locations and hospitality are ample compensation.</p> <p>Here are 10 of the best destinations in Australia that handle remoteness in style.</p> <p><strong>1. Angorichina Station – Flinders Ranges, SA</strong></p> <p>Australia has few family-operated farm-stay properties that successfully blend comfort, history, scenery, style, activities and interaction with the owners in a memorable package. Ian and Di Fargher achieve this brilliantly on their 64,000-hectare sheep station in the Flinders Ranges. Angorichina is situated superbly in a stunning landscape, 10 minutes' drive from the village of Blinman, 500 kilometres north of Adelaide and within easy access of Wilpena Pound. The Farghers treat every guest with genuine warmth and invite them to witness everyday station activities as well as learn about indigenous links with the land from an Aboriginal guide. There are two guest rooms: one in the 1860s homestead, the other in a separate cottage.</p> <p><strong>2. Bamurru Plains – Top End, NT</strong></p> <p>A 20-minute flight east of Darwin on the Mary River floodplain, this working buffalo property ripples with wildlife and offers guests abundant creature comforts. Voted best leisure property in Australasia-South Pacific by readers of Britain's Conde Nast Traveller magazine last year, Bamurru is modelled on Africa's best safari camps. Its nine safari suites are surrounded by the sights and sounds of the bush, especially tens of thousands of magpie geese, after which the camp is named. There are safari activities, including river cruises, meals are included and Kakadu is close by. There are no phones or television, so be prepared to leave the outside world behind.</p> <p><strong>3. Birdsville Hotel – Birdsville, Qld</strong></p> <p>You don't come to the outback's quintessential pub just for the accommodation. This 1884 National Trust-listed stone pub has a quirky and always entertaining front bar and enough all-round appeal to make it a great experience. There are plenty of sights in and around Birdsville, too, including the Big Red sandhill that provides symbolic access to the Simpson Desert, a fascinating museum, the easily traversed (but not in the wet) 517-kilometre Birdsville Track to Marree, South Australia, and plenty of ancient and early European history. The place is swamped during the Birdsville Races on the first weekend of September.</p> <p><strong>4. Bullo River Station – Top End, NT</strong></p> <p>One of author Sara Henderson's daughters, Marlee, and her husband, Franz Ranacher, have turned 200,000-hectare Bullo River Station - the focal point of several of Henderson's best-selling books - into a wonderful, in-the-wild tourism experience. The accommodation in guest quarters close to the homestead is comfortable without being five star but the experience, near the mouth of the Victoria River, is: crocodile spotting, barramundi fishing, rock art viewing, exploring, helicopter trips to remote gorges and more. Bullo is about a two-hour flight south-west of Darwin near the Western Australia border, or can be reached from the Victoria Highway (80 kilometres on a dirt road, 4WD dry season only), and is 200 kilometres from Kununurra.</p> <p><strong>5. Bush Camp at Faraway Bay – East Kimberley, WA</strong></p> <p>Few remote wilderness experiences match Bruce and Robyn Ellison's bush camp, on the rugged tip of Western Australia. Fly-in, fly-out (April to November) over King George Falls to a spectacular Timor Sea cliff-top setting. Excellent food and absolute relaxation around a rustic central lodge with swimming pool are the order of the day. Accommodation in private cabins is comfortable rather than luxurious but the total experience and friendly hosts are what make this destination so special.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="498" height="280" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/33482/image__498x280.jpg" alt="Image_ (70)"/></p> <p><strong>6. Cradle Mountain Lodge – Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair NP, Tas</strong></p> <p>This is a spectacular tract of wilderness, barely two hours' drive from Launceston. The lodge, in the national park, adds a touch of style to a world-class experience, especially when the weather turns sour - as it often does - at an altitude of more than 1500 metres. A three-hour walk to spectacular and much-photographed Dove Lake, 950 metres above sea level, is a must. There are four standards of private cabin accommodation, topped by luxurious spa suites. Meals are prepared in the rustic central lodge before and after you've ventured out walking, canoeing, fishing, biking or wildlife viewing.</p> <p><strong>7. Davidson's Arnhemland Safaris – Mount Borradaile, NT</strong></p> <p>Former buffalo hunter Max Davidson stumbled across the Mount Borradaile site in the 1980s and, with the co-operation of its traditional owners, he has a wildlife and indigenous tourism experience like no other, basic accommodation and facilities notwithstanding. The wildlife, birdlife, rock art galleries, bush tucker walks, Aboriginal culture and the astonishing Arnhem Land landscape draw travellers back on repeat visits.</p> <p><strong>8. El Questro Wilderness Retreat – East Kimberley, WA</strong></p> <p>With the orange-coloured Cockburn Ranges as a backdrop and just an hour's drive west of Kununurra, El Questro has a range of accommodation: the simple luxury of the homestead, perched high above Chamberlain Gorge; comfortable tented cabins in Emma Gorge with their own restaurant; and bungalows or camping by the Pentecost River. In keeping with the price tag, homestead guests usually fly in, take helicopter tours and live it up. More budget-conscious travellers drive from Kununurra and explore independently, on and off the station.</p> <p><strong>9. Freycinet Lodge – Freycinet NP, Tasmania</strong></p> <p>Midway on Tasmania's east coast, Freycinet Peninsula is home to the perfectly formed Wineglass Bay and a rugged, beautiful coastline. The eponymous lodge inside Freycinet National Park has a pristine, idyllic bayside waterfront location, four types of comfortable private cabins, a better-than-average restaurant plus bistro, as well as abundant wildlife, walks and water activities. Spring to autumn is the best time to visit.</p> <p><strong>10. Grand Hotel – Mildura, Victoria</strong></p> <p>This historic hotel began as a coffee house during prohibition in the 1890s. It is now a magnet for food and wine lovers drawn to the enterprises of Mr Mildura - cook and A Gondola On The Murray host Stefano di Pieri. Stefano's restaurant, a cafe bakery with food store and Mildura brewery pub are part of the hotel. Accommodation ranges from average to a palatial presidential suite with marble bathroom. But it's Stefano's degustation menu and great bluestone cellar atmosphere that, rightfully, draw the crowds.</p> <p><em>Written by Paul Meyers. First appeared on <a href="http://www.stuff.co.nz"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stuff.co.nz</span></strong></a>.</em></p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/11/the-strangest-town-in-australia/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>This might be the strangest town in Australia</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/12/anne-sinclair-on-discovering-the-sapphire-gemfields/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>Discovering Queensland’s Sapphire Gemfields</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/12/the-small-town-that-australia-forgot/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>The small town that Australia forgot</strong></em></span></a></p>

International Travel

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The view of Uluru that no one gets to see

<p>The view of Uluru has been featured on countless postcards, but for the first time we can view Australia’s most famous rock from a brand new perspective.</p> <p>New drone footage, which you can see above, offers a view of the 600 million-year-old monolith that only birds would’ve been able to enjoy before now.</p> <p>As the drone flies by Uluru we see an incredible, close-up view of the rock from waterholes to boulders and other features not normally picked up by tourists. Plus you see a jaw-dropping view of the surrounding area that will take your breath away.</p> <p>The drone that took this footage was actually the first to be given permission to do so, operating under permit inside the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park.</p> <p>Have you ever been to Uluru? How did you find the experience?</p> <p>Let us know in the comments section.</p> <p><em>Video credit: Facebook / Traveller</em></p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="/travel/international/2016/03/tourists-mistake-this-rock-for-uluru/"><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Tourists are mistaking this for Uluru</span></em></strong></a></p> <p><a href="/travel/international/2016/08/10-free-things-to-do-in-darwin/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>10 free things to do in Darwin</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="/travel/international/2016/08/5-more-things-to-do-in-the-red-centre/"><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">5 more things to do in the Red Centre</span></em></strong></a></p>

International Travel

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Birdsville races, the wildest party in the outback

<p>As we bump along the rutted dirt track into the tiny outback town of Birdsville, population 115, Elvis starts trotting beside our vehicle clutching a can of beer and encouraging us to toot.</p> <p>Just behind him, two bearded men in green skirts, riding boots and little else are arm-in-arm, following a crowd of people streaming towards the centre of town.</p> <p>“This is not going to be a beauty contest, I tell you," my friend says as we coast past the Birdsville Pub, its wraparound verandah heaving with swaggering punters in the late afternoon sun, just 10 kilometres from the South Australian border and on the edge of the Simpson Desert. It's the kind of place where the small petrol station doubles as a post office, and where you can count on one hand the number of children enrolled in the public school.</p> <p>But this was not just any weekend. During the first week of September travellers swarm here like blowflies to a freshly barbecued snag, eager to experience the spectacle that is the Melbourne Cup of the outback, the Birdsville Races.</p> <p>"It's like schoolies for the over 50s," says Senior Constable Neale McShane, the town's lone police officer who has presided over this dust-blown patch for the past decade.</p> <p>"You've still got the dust, and the flies and the heat, but everyone's having a really good time. Next week, though, you might see a tumbleweed blowing up the main street."</p> <p>The population explodes to more than 7000 for the two-day racing carnival, held at the claypan racing track on the outskirts of town. This is certainly no Flemington or Randwick racecourse, mind you. Any horse unfortunate enough to be at the back of the pack towards the end of the 2000-metre track might be swallowed by a dust cloud as the leaders thunder down the straight.</p> <p>Fashions on the field are a sight to behold. Soon after entering the gates I encounter one man who has shunned the traditional cork hat in favour of his own invention – a dozen or so ocky straps tied to the brim of his hat. "They wanted 20 bucks for one of those hats. I made this in five minutes," he proudly says.</p> <p>There's a couple dressed as the Queen and Prince Philip; a group of Santas in thongs and sunglasses; and a bunch of New Zealanders who constructed an enormous Akubra out of a Clark Rubber mat. Their costume has the added benefit that, as soon as they all squish under the wide brim and make their way towards the drinks line, the crowd miraculously parts and gives them a clear run to the bar.</p> <p><img width="496" height="275" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/28168/birdsville-in-text_496x275.jpg" alt="Birdsville -in -text" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p><em>Image credit: Stuff / Steve Christo</em></p> <p>Two words crop up repeatedly when I ask racegoers why they made the considerable journey here: "Bucket list".</p> <p>"There's acres and acres of nothing, and then just this ridiculousness in the middle of nowhere," says John, a sunburned punter in his 60s from Newcastle.</p> <p>"I've got no ambition to go overseas, I can't see the bloody point in that. This is everybody just having fun. Considering there's 115 locals, all the rest of us, we're just like flies, blowing in. Everyone's coming here the same reason I am, just to tick it off the bucket list."</p> <p>The punters stay everywhere and anywhere: in tents and swags at the local caravan park; on the banks of the Diamantina River; or in a specially erected city of tents a short stroll from the pub. Some even camp on the airstrip, under the wings of light planes that fly in from all over Australia for the event.</p> <p>Given the sheer number of people in town, you might expect a bit of rough and tumble, but Senior Constable Macshane attributes the lack of bust-ups in part to Fred Brophy and his boxing troupe, who roll into town and set up a huge tent in the centre of town.</p> <p>Brophy and his troupe, said to be the last of its type in the world, travel all over Queensland challenging those in the crowd to step up and try their luck against the boxers. Each night, throngs gather outside the tent to witness the spectacle, some bravely climbing up onto the stage to try to convince Brophy that they're fit enough and sober enough to fight.</p> <p>One older man tries his luck, announcing to Brophy and the crowd that he's from "Goulburn mate, the big potato. I don't need a good boxer."</p> <p>Brophy, eyeing him up and down, says: "No, you've had enough. Get down."</p> <p>There are cheers and jeers from a crowd, before a handful of spectators are chosen as challengers.</p> <p>Inside the tent a short time later, politician Pauline Hanson, who is in town for the races, acts as a ring card girl, sauntering around holding a card high to indicate the start of the first fight. The bell clangs and the crowd goes wild as a woman earlier selected from the crowd bangs her gloves together, hitches up her long dress and starts belting into one of Brophy's female boxers. "Give it to the sheila!" roars a man sitting nearby. The outback already felt foreign. In Brophy's tent we could well be on another planet.</p> <p>David Brooks has seen it all before. The organic cattle farmer was born in Birdsville and has lived here most his life, is half-owner in the pub and is the president of the Birdsville Race Club. His grandparents settled here in the early 1880s.</p> <p>Mr Brooks said the remoteness of Birdsville was exactly what drew people to the town for the races.</p> <p>"Birdsville historically has been a place people come to because of its remoteness, because they think 'It's a challenge to get there, we should try to do it one day'," Mr Brooks said.</p> <p>There's also something special about a good old-fashioned bush racing meet too, he said.</p> <p>"I guess it's the dirt track. The dust flying up. A lot of the people that are here, half the crowd would have been before. They just can't get it out of their system, it's like a drug."</p> <p><em>Image credit: Stuff / Dominic Lorrimer</em></p> <p><em>Written by Megan Levy. First appeared on <a href="http://Stuff.co.nz" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stuff.co.nz</span></strong></a>.</em></p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/01/6-award-winning-aussie-tourist-spots-2016/"><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">6 award-winning Aussie tourist spots to visit in 2016</span></em></strong></a></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/09/6-more-great-spots-to-camp-in-australia/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>6 more great spots to camp in Australia</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/07/crossing-the-spectacular-simpson-desert/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>Crossing the spectacular Simpson Desert</strong></em></span></a></p>

International Travel

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5 Australian desert landscapes you must experience

<p>With around 35 per cent of the country being classified as desert, Australia has some incredible, yet stark, landscapes. These are the ones you don’t want to miss.</p> <p><strong>1. The Pinnacles Desert, Western Australia</strong></p> <p>Strange finger-like limestone rock formations just straight up from the sand, giving this desert an eerie, otherworldly quality. As the sun moves, the rocks cast ever-changing shadows along the sand. The Pinnacles is around 200 kilometres north of Perth and is at its most stunning in spring when the surrounding areas burst into bloom with fields of wildflowers.</p> <p><strong>2. Simpson Desert, South Australia &amp; Northern Territory</strong></p> <p>Covering 170,000 square kilometres, the Simpson Desert is the fourth largest in the country. It’s made up of more than 1,000 parallel sand dunes, some of which are up to 200 kilometres long. Don’t miss Rainbow Valley, a spectacular sandstone bluff with bands of colour, or the ancient rock carvings of the Arrernte people at Ewaninga. Some of the country’s best four wheel drive tracks run through the desert’s red sand making for a challenging, yet thrilling, desert experience.</p> <p><strong>3. Tanami Desert, Northern Territory &amp; Western Australia</strong></p> <p>Australia’s northernmost desert, the Tanami has a diverse landscape that even includes wetlands and a permanent lake, a rarity in such arid areas. Lake Gregory supports around 100,000 water birds and can be up to 10 metres deep. The Tanami is one of the easiest deserts to explore with the Tanami Track, a good quality dirt road, starting just 20 kilometres outside of Alice Springs. The famous Canning Stock Route also runs through the region and is popular with four wheel drivers.</p> <p><img width="498" height="245" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/25513/shutterstock_365793986_498x245.jpg" alt="desert" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p><strong>4. Sturt Stony Desert, South Australia, New South Wales &amp; Queensland</strong></p> <p>Covering the area where three states meet, the Sturt Stony Desert looks like the most inhospitable place on earth. It’s named for explorer Charles Sturt who came to the desert in 1845 expecting to find a vast inland sea. He was sorely disappointed. The only vegetation on the flat, stony plains are scrub plants like saltbush with a few hardy trees along the lines of dry creekbeds. Despite this, a surprising number of animals thrive here including kangaroos, wallabies and plenty of lizards.</p> <p><strong>5. Great Victoria Desert, Western Australia &amp; South Australia</strong></p> <p>Australia’s largest desert covers an incredible 400,000 square kilometres and is the third largest desert in the world. It’s classified as a desert because it receives so little rain, but the landscape is actually surprisingly lush and varied. Plants like marble gums, mulga and spinifex are common, having adapted to survive with little water. You’ll drive through an ever-changing vista of plains, gorges, bluffs, dunes and mountain ranges, and be able to spot plenty of wildlife along the way. When the rain does fall, the whole area springs to life in a riot of wildflowers.</p> <p>Have you ever been to these incredible deserts?  What part of Australia do you think is the most beautiful?</p> <p>Let us know in the comments!</p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><a href="/travel/international/2016/07/crossing-the-spectacular-simpson-desert/"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em>Crossing the spectacular Simpson Desert</em></span></strong></a></p> <p><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/travel/international/2016/06/8-incredible-destinations-in-outback-australia/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>8 incredible destinations in outback Australia</strong></em></span></a></p> <p><a href="/travel/international/2016/06/crossing-australia-in-style-aboard-the-indian-pacific/"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong>Crossing Australia in style aboard the Indian Pacific</strong></em></span></a></p>

International Travel