AUSTRALIA - TRAVEL - TOUR - ADVENTURE
Custom Search

HOME   CONTACT
Adventure
Australia
Alaska
Backpacker
Beach
Biking
Bird Watching
Camping
Canada
Canoe -
Kayak
Dogging
Fall Foliage
Hiking
Hunting

India
National Park
Rafting
Rock Climbing
Mountain Bike
Safari
Scuba Diving
Skiing and Snowboard
Trekking


 

 


 

 


 



 

 


 

AUSTRALIA - TRAVEL - TOUR - ADVENTURE

The Australian Outback is one of the last true frontiers of the modern world.

Australian's outback is a vast land, just the right destination for adventure travel. Sometimes harsh and unforgiving, but always endowed with spectacular beauty, enormous variety and fascinating history.

The sheer expanse of this Australian travel destination  is breathtaking. This vibrant red land is a mosaic of living aboriginal cultures, dreamtime legends, cool rock pools, shady gorges, red sand dunes, unique flora and fauna and dramatic rock formations.

The word 'outback' is not easily defined, but you know the Australian outback when you see it. The outback is mythical Australia travel, the essence of Australia, and in many ways the real Australia, as 75% of the Australian continent shares the outback's dry, desert characteristics. There is no such thing as a lifeless desert in Australia: as visitors soon learn, the outback is teeming with color, life and diversity.

The term 'outback' refers to the remote and arid interior country of Australia, could be just what are looking for on your Australian travel. Although it is often used today to refer loosely to any country outside of

 the main urban areas. The term is generally reserved for locations that are more remote than those areas described as being in 'the bush'.

The Australian outback is not officially recognized within any governmental frameworks or boundaries. Some local government entities use the term to enhance the tourist appeal for their region. Curiously, even tour operators in countries as far apart as the United States and South Africa are starting to use the term 'outback' to describe their products!

Australian travel exploring this awesome open spaces. Many consider the Northern Territory, and Central Australia in particular, to represent the true outback. While the Northern Territory is certainly Australia's premier outback tour destination, many other adjoining regions of Australia are also popular outback destinations: The Kimberley and the Pilbara in Western Australia; Mount Isa, Longreach, Boulia and Birdsville in Queensland; Coober Pedy, Oodnadatta, Maree, the Simpson Desert, Innamincka and the Birdsville Track in South Australia.

Organized package tours to the outback are popular, although many Australian and international tourists prefer to travel in their own vehicles. Such self-drive tours, particularly on the more remote outback dirt roads, require careful planning and an appropriate vehicle, usually four wheel drive. On remote outback tours, plenty of supplies and equipment including food, water and fuel should be carried. Some tours in more remote areas of the outback should not be undertaken with a single vehicle: a convoy approach (or tag-along tour) should be considered instead. Deaths from tourists becoming stranded on outback tours are infrequent but do occur, and poorly prepared tourists are regularly rescued when stranded by breakdowns or bad weather.

Among the most popular Australian travel & tour destinations in Central Australia, the true 'Red Centre' of the Australian outback, are Uluru (Ayers Rock), Kata Tjuta (The Olgas), Kings Canyon (Watarrka), Alice Springs, Palm Valley and the West MacDonnell Ranges. Few places in Australia or the world can match Central Australia's rugged natural beauty, its diverse, unique flora and fauna, or the vitality of its living indigenous cultures.

The Great Barrier Reef

is a world-renowned destination for traveler's seeking sun, pristine beaches and great scuba diving in a magical tropical setting bursting with natural life and color. A visit to the Great Barrier Reef can easily be combined with tours to Cairns and the Daintree Rainforest.

The Great Barrier Reef is located off the coast of Australia in north-east Queensland, and is undoubtedly one of the most outstanding natural wonders of the world. A World Heritage listed park, it is one of the foremost tropical holiday destinations in the world. The Great Barrier Reef combines a fantastic climate, white sandy beaches, pristine native rainforests, and a shimmering turquoise blue ocean, ensuring its reputation as one of Australia's best locations in which to lie on the beach, surf, snorkel, swim, and sail.

The Great Barrier Reef covers more than 300,000 square kilometers and is scattered with beautiful islands and idyllic coral reefs. The area abounds with wildlife, including dolphins, whales, dugong, green turtles, 200 bird species, 1500 fish species and 4000 types of mollusk. The reef system is made up of around 3000 reefs ranging from 1 hectare to over 10,000 hectares in area.

The Great Barrier Reef's popularity is evident in the fact that more than 2 million people visit each year, making tourism a major earner for the Australian state of Queensland. More than 500 commercial vessels are available to transport tourists to the reef system, and tourism is permitted through nearly all the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park. Some parts of the Reef are protected: fishing is restricted in some areas, while particular animals including whales, dolphins, green turtles and dugong are all protected.

Most visitors value the reef's beauty and diversity, which is after all why they visit. Tour operators and tourists as well as government agencies cooperate to develop sustainable tourism approaches over the medium to long term. Despite the challenges, the Great Barrier Reef remains one of the natural wonders of the world, a rich environment of extraordinary beauty with a diverse ecosystem, which makes its conservation essential. This will help maintain the Reef as fantastic place to relax and enjoy Australia's natural heritage.

The ideal conditions for coral are shallow warm water, plenty of water movement and light, and salty water low in nutrients. There are many different types of coral, some slow growing and living for hundreds of years, others faster growing. The colors of coral are created by algae, and only living coral is colored.

Coral reefs are sensitive to climate change, changes in water movement patterns, and physical damage. Problems such as global warming, the building of structures such as breakwaters, and excess nutrients from human settlements can have a negative effect on the reef system and the wildlife which depends upon it for survival. Tourism may also have a negative impact, with fragile corals broken by reef walking, dropped anchors or by boats dropping fuel and other sorts of pollution. Even large numbers of people in the water, with the associated run-off of sweat and suntan lotions, can have a negative impact on the reef's fragile environment. Author Miguel Scaccialupo writes regularly on Great Barrier Reef Tours.

Bunbury Western Australia
Broome The Pearl Capital of Australia
Central Australias Magical Palm Valley
Coober Pedy The Opal Capital Of Australia
Enjoy An Uluru Tour in Central Australia
Historic Arltunga in Outback Central Australia
Historic Hermannsburg in Central Australia
Mornington Peninsula The Bays Are Waiting
The Great Ocean Road
South Australia's Magnificent Barossa Valley
Tour Ayers Rock in Central Australia
Lake Tinaroo Day Trip from Port Douglas
Atherton Tablelands Day Trip From Cairns

Tasmania The Australian Island State
The Great Barrier Reef

The Enchanting South West of Australia
The Exotic North of Australia
Whale Watching Down Under
Australian Outdoors Plants Animals Birds and Places to go
A Fishy Road Trip in Cairns
Cairns Esplanade Where the Town Comes to Life
Central Australia The Eastern MacDonnell Ranges

Central Australia The Western MacDonnell Ranges
Central Australia The Eastern MacDonnell Ranges
Experience The Natural Riches of Australias Northern Territory
Daintree Rainforest

The Kimberley Australia's Last Outback Frontier
 

 
AUSTRALIA - TRAVEL - TOUR - ADVENTURE
 
Web www.outdoor-expert.com

HOME  CONTACT      copyright  outdoor-expert.com

 

Copyright by outdoor-expert.com
AUSTRALIA - TRAVEL - TOUR - ADVENTURE 1