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Hitting the Rails on the Indian Pacific
Train
This
3-day train journey across the Outback regularly makes it onto the
"Top Rail Journeys in the World" lists compiled by travel
magazines. The desert scenery ain't all that magnificent -- it's the
unspoiled, empty vastness that passengers appreciate. It includes
the longest straight stretch of track in the world, 478km (296
miles) across the treeless Nullarbor Plain. Start in Sydney and end
in Perth, or vice versa, or just do a section.
Experiencing Sydney
Sydney is more than just the magnificent
Harbour Bridge and Opera House. No other city has beaches in
abundance like Sydney, and few have such a magnificently scenic
harbor. Our advice is to get aboard a ferry, walk from one side of
the bridge to the other, and try to spend a week here, because
you're going to need it.
Seeing the Great Barrier Reef
It's a glorious 2,000km (1,240-mile) long
underwater coral fairyland with electric colors and bizarre fish
life -- and it comes complete with warm water and year-round
sunshine. This is what you came to Australia to see. When you're not
snorkeling over coral and giant clams almost as big as you, scuba
diving, calling in at tropical towns, or lazing on deserted island
beaches, you're trying out the sun lounges or enjoying the
first-rate food.
Exploring the Wet Tropics Rainforest
Folks who come from skyscraper cities like
Manhattan or Los Angeles can't get over the moisture-dripping ferns,
the neon-blue butterflies, and the primeval peace of this World
Heritage rainforest stretching north, south, and west from Cairns.
Hike it, four-wheel-drive it, or glide over the treetops in the
Skyrail gondola.
Bareboat Sailing in the Whitsundays
Bareboat means unskippered -- that's right,
even if you think port is an after-dinner drink, you can charter a
yacht, pay for a day's instruction from a skipper, and then take
over the helm yourself and explore these 74 island gems. It's easy.
Anchor in deserted bays, snorkel over dazzling reefs, fish for coral
trout, and feel the wind in your sails.
Exploring the Olgas (Kata Tjuta) &
Ayers Rock (Uluru)
Just why everyone comes thousands of miles
to see the big red stone of Ayers Rock is a mystery that's
probably why they come, because the Rock is a mystery. Just 50km (31
miles) from Ayers Rock are the round red heads of the Olgas, a
second rock formation more significant to Aborigines and more
intriguing to many visitors.
Taking an Aboriginal Culture Tour (Alice
Springs)
Eating female wasps, contemplating a hill as
a giant resting caterpillar, and imagining that the stars are your
grandmother smiling down at you will give you a new perspective on
Aboriginal culture. See what we mean on a half-day tour from the
Aboriginal Art & Culture Centre.
Discovering the Kimberley
Australia's last frontier, the Kimberley is
a romantic cocktail of South Sea pearls, red mountain ranges, aqua
seas, deadly crocodiles, Aboriginal rock art, and million-acre farms
in a never-ending wilderness. Cross it by four-wheel-drive, stay in
safari tents on a cattle ranch, swim under ferny waterfalls, ride a
camel along the beach in Broome, and more.
Rolling in Wildflowers
Imagine Texas three times over and covered
in wildflowers. That's what much of the state of Western Australia
looks like every spring from around August through October when
pink, mauve, red, white, yellow, and blue wildflowers bloom. Aussies
flock here big-time for this spectacle, so book ahead.
Drinking in the Barossa Valley
One of Australia's four largest
wine-producing areas, this German-speaking region less than an
hour's drive from Adelaide is also the prettiest. Adelaide's
restaurants happen to be some of the country's best, too, so test
out your wine purchases with the city's terrific food.
Getting Dusty in the Desert
Head inland from Adelaide to the Outback to
visit remote pubs and settlements, the craggy ridges of the Flinders
Ranges, as well as dry salt lakes and stony deserts.
Seeing the Sights Along the Great Ocean
Road
This 106km (66-mile) coastal road carries
you past wild and stunning beaches, forests, and dramatic cliff-top
scenery -- including the Twelve Apostles, 12 pillars of red rock
standing in isolation in the foaming Southern Ocean.
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