I've spent the last 26 years traveling by train all along both US coasts, through the Midwest, and across the UK.
18.09.2024 - 20:49 / lonelyplanet.com / Byron Bay
Sep 18, 2024 • 2 min read
Nearly 20 years ago as a young Canadian backpacker clutching my guidebook, I arrived in Australia for the first time. I didn’t leave a moment to waste: I went to Sydney’s Opera House. I learned to surf in Byron Bay. I sailed through the Whitsundays and snorkeled on the Great Barrier Reef. I drove across K’gari (known at that time as Fraser Island) in search of dingoes. Really, I did it all. (Or so I thought.)
Four weeks later, I ticked Australia off my “to-visit” list and swore I’d never come back.
Yet, I kept getting pulled back, eventually moving Down Under. Each of my following trips revealed that I’d barely skimmed the surface on my first visit. I’d been a classic victim of what people think they know about Australia.
Are you dreaming of lazing on one of Australia’s white sand beaches? Fair enough – we’ve got about 12,000 of them. But if salt, sun and surfing isn’t your thing, the rest of the country isn’t just red desert. There’s also a 180-million-year-old rainforest, one of the world’s largest tropical savannas and a mountain range that runs for 3,700km down the East Coast’s spine.
Yes, Melbourne has great coffee, Sydney is a world-class city and bohemian Byron Bay is beloved by celebs. But Lonely Planet’s top-selling Australia title is actually our Tasmania guidebook. The island state wins fans for its wildlife encounters (imagine camping on an island where wombats waddle past your tent), farm-to-table culinary scene (the city of Launceston belongs to the exclusive UNESCO Cities of Gastronomy club) and rich Aboriginal and convict-era history.
Australia is home to the world’s oldest continuous living culture. However, its Traditional Custodians are far from homogenous, with more than 250 Aboriginal groups whose diverse cultural traditions often reflect the surrounding landscape. The didgeridoo, for example? It’s from an area in the Northern Territory.
There’s no argument that they’re pretty iconic, but they’ve also got some major competition – and we’re not just talking echidnas, platypus or quokkas. Australia is home to dozens of animals you’ve probably never heard of, from potoroos, numbats and quolls, to bilbies and tree kangaroos. According to the Australian Wildlife Conservancy, 87% of the country’s mammals can be found nowhere else on earth.
Nah, you’ll be alright mate. You’re much more likely to get trampled by a horse than to have a dangerous or deadly encounter with a snake, shark, crocodile or spider. (I’m not even joking.) What you really need to watch out for? Kangaroos. They are known to jump in front of cars on the road, particularly at dawn and dusk.
For Explorers Everywhere
© 2024
I've spent the last 26 years traveling by train all along both US coasts, through the Midwest, and across the UK.
Oct 5, 2024 • 6 min read
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