Werribee Ppen Range Zoo

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Werribee Ppen Range Zoo

Why travel thousands of kilometres when a taste of African adventure is available just 30 minutes from Melbourne's city centre, at Werribee Open Range Zoo? You will find an amazing array of animals living on 225 hectares of wide, open savannah.

On the Pula Reserve Walking Trail, come face-to-face with amazing gorillas, a pride of lions, see monkeys and cheetahs at play and feel the sand between your toes at the new Hippo Beach.


No trip to the Zoo is complete without heading out on safari across grassy plains where you will find rhinoceros, giraffes, zebras and antelopes grazing together on the picturesque savannah.

All of the above, including the 40-minute safari tour, is included in the Zoo admission price. For those looking for even more adventure, why not try one of the behind-the-scenes Wild Encounters? Feed a giraffe, stroke a serval, see amazing animals on the savannah from an open vehicle, and, in the new Gorilla Behind the Scenes encounter, get up close and personal with three gorilla bachelors.

Children under 16 years of age receive free entry every weekend, during Victorian Government school holidays and on Victorian public holidays.


Taronga Zoo - Mosman

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Taronga Zoo - Mosman

One of Sydney's most famous attractions, the award-winning Taronga Zoo is home to over 4,000 animals, including Australian native wildlife, as well as rare and endangered exotic animals. Overlooking the magnificent Sydney Harbour, Taronga Zoo is just 12 minutes from the city by ferry. Open 365 days a year, admission includes daily keeper talks and shows, and access to the Sky Safari, Sydney's only cable car. 


Enjoy the QBE Free-Flight Bird Show overlooking Sydney Harbour, featuring some of the world's most spectacular birds and be delighted by the Daily Seal Show where Australian and Californian Sea-lions and the New Zealand Fur-seals will impress you with their grace and skill.

Challenge yourself on Taronga's exciting new sky high adventure, Wild Ropes. Tackle obstacles, cross suspension bridges and soar through the trees while enjoying breath-taking views of Sydney Harbour.


For more information please visit https://taronga.org.au/

Uluru - Ayers Rock




Uluru - Ayers Rock

Rising from seemingly nowhere in the deep centre of Australia, Uluru (Ayers Rock) is one of the world's great natural wonders. If you are planning to explore Uluru (Ayers Rock) and experience both the physical and cultural significance of this Australian icon, we are here to help you with your Uluru tour, car hire and accommodation needs. Alternatively explore our popular Package Deals . Feel free to contact us for advice and service.


Physically Beautiful

Most visitors would have seen photographs, or advertisements featuring Uluru (Ayers Rock), but nothing prepares you for the physical impact of this vast monolith. Its sheer immensity dwarfs everything around it. Uluru (Ayers Rock) has acquired its reputation not just because it is such a unique landform, but also because of the effect the sun has on its colours and appearance. Sunrises and Sunsets cause changes to its colour from browns though oranges, reds to finally grey.

Spiritually Significant

A trip to Uluru (Ayers Rock) is also about experiencing and understanding its cultural and spiritual significance. Both Uluru (Ayers Rock) and Kata Tjuta have great cultural significance for the Anangu traditional landowners. Self discover or take guided Uluru (Ayers Rock) tours that inform about the local flora and fauna, bush foods and the Aboriginal Dream time stories of the area.


Fraser Island




Fraser Island

Fraser Island stretches over 123 kilometres in length and 22 kilometres at its widest point. With an area of 184 000 hectares it is the largest sand island in the world.

Fraser Island's World Heritage listing ranks it with Australia's Uluru, Kakadu and the Great Barrier Reef. Fraser Island is a precious part of Australia's natural and cultural heritage, it is protected for all to appreciate and enjoy.


Fraser island is a place of exceptional beauty, with its long uninterrupted white beaches flanked by strikingly coloured sand cliffs, and over 100 freshwater lakes, some tea-coloured and others clear and blue all ringed by white sandy beaches. Ancient rainforests grow in sand along the banks of fast-flowing, crystal-clear creeks.

Fraser Island is the only place in the world where tall rainforests are found growing on sand dunes at elevations of over 200 metres. The low "wallum" heaths on the island are of particular evolutionary and ecological significance, and provide magnificent wildflower displays in spring and summer.

The immense sand blows and cliffs of coloured sands are part of the longest and most complete age sequence of coastal dune systems in the world and they are still evolving.

They are a continuous record of climatic and sea level changes over the last 700 000 years. The highest dunes on the island reach up to 240 metres above sea level.

The Great Sandy Strait, separating Fraser Island from the mainland, is listed by the Convention on Wetlands of International Importance (Ramsar Convention).

The wetlands include: rare patterned ferns; mangrove colonies; sea-grass beds; and up to 40,000 migratory shorebirds. Rare, vulnerable or endangered species include dugongs, turtles, Illidge's ant-blue butterflies and eastern curlews.


Melbourne Cricket Ground




Melbourne Cricket Ground

The MCG is more than just a sports venue. It’s a place where memories are made and childhood dreams come alive. There are fleeting moments at the ‘G that stay with you forever. 

Ask any Victorian and they’ll be aware of the Melbourne Cricket Ground’s status as the home of sport.

But it is also steeped in a rich history; established in 1853, less than 20 years after the founding of Melbourne, it is often described as the beating heart of this fantastic city.

It has been the home of Australian football since 1859, and was the birthplace of Test cricket in 1877 and one-day international cricket in 1971.


It was the main stadium for the 1956 Olympic Games and 2006 Commonwealth Games, attracts up to 100,000 fans to the annual AFL Grand Final and the ‘G comes to life each Christmas at the Boxing Day Test.

Other sporting spectacles to have been held there include World Cup soccer qualifiers, rugby league home and away matches and State of Origin, international rugby union and Austral Wheel Races.

But the ‘G, as it is affectionately known to locals, is so much more than Australia’s biggest sporting stadium.  It has hosted Papal and Royal visits and housed US Marines, the US Army airforces and our own RAAF during World War II. It has also been a concert venue for international and local performers, held open days, charity events, dinners and many more.

Nestled in Yarra Park, about a 10-minute walk from the heart of the city, the MCG is open every day of the year for events and functions and tourists and the general public alike can visit seven days a week.

TOURS AND MUSEUMS

The MCG Tour is an absolute must on any Melbourne visit. The guided tour is the only opportunity to get an exclusive, behind the scenes peek of one of the world’s most iconic sports stadiums but is also a chance to hear about the history and secrets of the ‘G.

The National Sports Museum is unique amongst sports and stadium museums around the world.

It brings together the history of the Melbourne Cricket Club and the MCG itself as well as more than 3500 objects across countless sports. And with an interactive sports gallery called Game On for visitors to experience the thrill of participation, there is truly something for everyone.

The MCG offers a combined ticket to both attractions – go to www.nsm.org.au for more information on ticketing and opening times.

CAFE AND PUB CULTURE COMES TO LIFE

If you have tasted Melbourne’s world-famous cafe and pub culture you will appreciate the transformation the ‘G has made through its own range of bars and cafes.

Venues such as the Paddock Cafe and Terrace Cafe are the equal of many of Melbourne’s hidden cafe secrets and are the perfect complement to the range of beer gardens, rooftop terraces and sports bars scattered throughout the stadium.

While the steady calendar of top-class sporting events will offer unforgettable experiences for those who attend, there are plenty of other reasons to visit the MCG more often.


Kakadu National Park







Kakadu National Park

About Kakadu

Located 240 kilometres east of Darwin in Australia’s tropical north, Kakadu National Park is Australia’s largest terrestrial national park. Kakadu covers almost 20,000 square kilometres and is a place of enormous ecological and biological diversity. It extends from the coast and estuaries in the north through floodplains, billabongs and lowlands to rocky ridges and stone country in the south. These landscapes are home to a range of rare and endemic plants and animals, including more than one-third of Australia's bird species and one-quarter of its freshwater and estuarine fish species.



Culture

Kakadu is considered a living cultural landscape. The traditional owners Bininj Mungguy have lived on and cared for this country for more than 50,000 years. Their deep spiritual connection to the land dates back to the Creation and has always been an important part of the Kakadu story.

World Heritage listing

The extraordinary natural beauty and ancient cultural heritage of this land was recognised internationally in 1981 when it was first inscribed on the World Heritage list. Further land was added to the listing in 1987 and 1992. In 2011, the Koongarra land, which had previously been excluded from the listing because of its potential uranium resources, was added to the Kakadu World Heritage Area following decades of lobbying by Koongarra's senior custodian Jeffrey Lee. The land is now part of Kakadu National Park, protecting its significant cultural and heritage values for future generations.

Joint management

Today, the World Heritage-listed park remains well protected by a board of management, which has an Aboriginal majority representing the traditional owners. This arrangement showcases to the world how 'joint management' can combine ancient culture and modern practice.

Are you looking for   Kakadu National Park Tours‎


Whitewater rafting in and around Cairns – a little taste of danger

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Whitewater rafting in and around Cairns – a little taste of danger

Occasionally we do seem like we could possibly go someplace and not care about anything else. Where we could create a risk-free and cozy globe, and also get a taste of adventure as well as prospective threat.

Various experience sports allow us be heroes and also idols for a while, a James Cook or Scott in our little world. Australia, a primeval globe that drinks hands with the extremes of nature, is an excellent setting for many of these sporting activities. Whitewater rafting is a journey sporting activities that has actually gotten wide appeal at once when individuals settled in their peaceful life want a bit of tumult.


Queensland, in the north-east of Australia, supplies a few of the world's best possibilities for whitewater rafting. With the Great Barrier Reef on one side and also an ageless rainforest on the other, the area in between is ruled by the undiscovered rabidity of untamed rivers. These rivers have fed the woodlands and the seas for years, and also are currently feeding guy's wish for adventure.

There are numerous streams running through the rain forest and close-by area that record the rich exotic rain. Additionally the So, when they pass by unspoilt woodland land, they do so with a rage that appears paradoxical in the tranquil atmosphere. Of course, not every one of the streams and streams hurry with the exact same ferocity. Some delicately amble, some kiss by the trees promptly, some increase your goosebumps as well as some make you wish you didn't pertain to Australia in any way! With a rafting problem category varying from Course I to a hair elevating Course V that only the knowledgeable or the reckless could fathom, these streams could provide you world class rafting experiences.

While whitewater rafting can be very hazardous, properly run events make sure the highest degree of security. Although deaths are infrequent, every individual has to sign on an obligation type recognizing the danger intrinsic. The Course I and II waters are really safe as well as big rafts carrying more than a lots people amble by to the joviality of the bikers. Yet the whiter waters test the experience, talents and also bravado of those opting to come. The danger degree, on the other hand, are not cast in rock, and with higher subjugating of stream and much better framework, often come down in category.

Whitewater rafting options in Queensland near Cairns are numerous. There are half day experiences, and also there are someday journeys. You can opt for multiple day journeys, varying from two to 6 days, also travelling right into remote releasing factors by helicopter.

You could choose your trouble level as well, which vary from stretch to stretch, and stream to stream. Correspondingly the rate of the rafting trips can also differ-- one service provider checklists package deals starting here $100 and goes beyond $1000. While many rivers around Daintree are suitable for whitewater rafting-- after all, they would anyway fall somewhere in that Class I to Class VI classification-- the Barron River, the Tully Stream as well as the North Johnstone Stream provide the optimum possibilities and also are most favored by service providers. A lengthy journey on the Tully Stream, as an example, will certainly bring you in person with as several as 45 rapids.

Queensland is a captivating land with many destinations. Remaining in Cairns you are spoilt for choice. You can bungee leap, sky dive, scuba dive, mountain bicycle, sail, do sea kayaking or much else. There are several provider that offer wild water rafting centers with led rafting too. Whitewater rafting stays an uniqueness for lots of, however it is an uniqueness that will likely make you neglect everything else while you feel it.

Disclaimer
We take no obligation for error or noninclusions in the information supplied, which is not planned as particular suggestions. Before counting on the product, you must acquire appropriate professional recommendations pertinent to your specific scenarios to assess accuracy, money, completeness and also relevance of the information to your particular needs.


Kayaking to glory – cleaving through the Barrier Reef

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Kayaking to glory – cleaving through the Barrier Reef 

On his desert island, Robinson Crusoe had made a Kayak (the English call it canoe) so big that he could not pull it to the sea. Luckily, today we have actually lighter variations made from fiberglass, polyethylene, Kevlar, carbon fiber, Royalex or hand-built systems like the 'skin-on-frame' selections. Today, kayaking is a greatly popular showing off and also enjoyment task, as well as is catching up fast worldwide. And Great Obstacle Coral reef allows one of one of the most exotic as well as fantastic kayaking journeys in the entire world.


The globe's biggest coral reef, the Great Barrier Reef flexes over 2000 kilometers, embracing the Queensland coastline of Australia throughout. It is so huge that it is also noticeable from area! Called the biggest living animal, the coral reef and the coral islands are really the living physical bodies as well as dead shells and down payments of billions of corals-- in the whole Wonderful Obstacle system, there are 900 islands and 3000 coral reefs. While the Europeans initially came to know of the Reef as late as 1770 when Captain Chef ran swamped it, Aboriginal Australians learnt about it from the start.

The corals of the reefs offer a massive all-natural breakwater, making sure the water is instead calmer that it would certainly have been before the birth of the reef. This has been a godsend for kayaking. While whitewater kayaking is far more tumultuous, the majority of the travelers attempting their hands mixed-up kayaking at the Reef are either new to it, or decently experienced. Therefore, the reasonably peaceful water produces simpler kayaking as well as fewer capsizing (and also much less disturbing of corals). The waters allow the kayaks to be relatively much more standard bottomed, permitting better floatation security. Yet even if you tumble, do not fret, do not worry even if you don't know the 'eskimo roll'. The kayak would survive. Besides the overviews and assistants from the kayak business would be nearby.

The kayaking opportunities are several around the Cairns, Palm Cove area. From Hand Cove, one could paddle around the resort Island of Double Island. One can additionally walk on the exclusive coastlines, offered the visiting business has asked consent for this. A vacation destination for the abundant and the famous, Dual Island has much better destinations in the form of dolphins, turtles, manta rays, as well as other aquatic life. Various other parts of the island include beautiful tropical gardens, where you can have a pleasure of delightful tropical fruits, or have a good mug of coffee or tea. One could get magnificent perspectives of the coastline, Cape Tribulation and Daintree from this place.

However probably the best appeal of kayaking on the Great Obstacle Reef is the close distance with the corals. The millions tones of shades, the overwelming shapes, the swaying pointers of real-time reefs and also the unusual encounters with flighty fish shoals (with god recognizes the number of millions fishes in them!) are special encounters. As you sink in a pleasurable sundown from the water, you may feel like never returning. Some attempt a compromise-- there are some liveaboards where you could remain for a couple of days if you don't seem like leaving!
The Great Barrier Reef is a vulnerable setting, and is heavily controlled. One should make sure that the ecological balance and the solemnity of the reef is maintained to ensure that you and also I could enjoy this divine present for all time to come.

The coral reef is a huge stretch of wonder and could be accessed from anywhere. But the very best gain access to point is possibly from Cairns location, another charming place around 25 minutes from Palm Cove that can keep you very busy with sights, sounds and also activities for a fortnight. And also site visitors to Double Island can stay at the Refuge Palm Cove which is located merely across a slim channel of the Great Barrier Coral reef which offers glamorous holiday accommodation facilities to include comfort to the trip.

McCrossin's Mill Museum, Uralla

McCrossin's Mill Museum, Uralla

McCrossin's Mill Museum - external site, Uralla, near Armidale NSW, is owned outright and operated by Uralla Historical Society Inc. - external site, whose members all work on a voluntary basis. Housed in a restored granite and brick flour mill, McCrossin's Mill is a multi-award winning museum and gallery. Upstairs its collection of Chinese artefacts from the Rocky River goldfields and a near-complete Chinese Joss House is recognised as being of national significance. McCrossin's Mill Museum, Uralla



Chinese Joss House in the McCrossin's Mill Museum originally came from the Rocky River goldfields, Uralla. Courtesy of the Museum
The downstairs is dedicated to the story of Captain Thunderbolt (Frederick Ward), one of the last roaming bushrangers in NSW, who lived around Uralla. In addition to paintings by Philip Chauncey, artefacts belonging to Thunderbolt include the table on which his body was laid out in Uralla courthouse. McCrossin's Mill Museum, Uralla

Another exhibition 'Trickett's Triumph' tells the story of rower Ned Trickett - external site, a 'forgotten piece of Australian history' about the son of a convict who became Australia's first world champion. The museum holds Trickett's world championship rowing trophy, bought by Museum director Kent Mayo out of his own pocket after a six-year hunt, and the rower's massive headstone. McCrossin's Mill Museum, Uralla

Australian War Memorial, Canberra

Australian War Memorial, Canberra

The largest and most successful history museum in the country is the Australian War Memorial - external site. Over half of Australia's inventory of heritage items are located here. The Memorial commemorates the sacrifice of Australians who have died in war and assists Australians to understand the experience of war. It was initiated by Australia's official war historian C E W Bean and John Treloar. The memorial provides ready means to search its vast archive online for documentation on particular servicemen and servicewomen. Australian War Memorial, Canberra


Displays provide direct evidence of the lives of the men and women who served and died for Australia. The Gallipoli gallery - external site about the ANZACs, for example, uses original letters, photographs, diaries and artworks to follow the campaign from the departure of the first convoy to evacuation in December 1915. Australian War Memorial, Canberra

Powerhouse Museum, NSW

Powerhouse Museum, NSW

The Powerhouse Museum - external site, in Sydney, is the one of the largest and most popular museums in Australia. Its collection of over 500,000 objects spans history, science, technology, design, industry, decorative arts, music, transport and space exploration. Powerhouse Museum, NSW


It presents 22 permanent exhibitions, several temporary exhibitions, and over 250 interactives, all based on the ideas and technologies that have changed our world. A visit can include science experiments, virtual reality 3D theatres, performances and fascinating lectures. Learning and creativity are a strong focus. Powerhouse Museum, NSW

Digital resources include mobile apps such as Layar - external site, which allows you to walk around Sydney and discover how it looked 100 years ago, and a huge database with detailed information on the objects in the collection. Powerhouse Museum, NSW

Cocos Islands

Cocos Islands

The Cocos (Keeling) Islands are located 2,800 kilometres north-west of Perth in the Indian Ocean. The group, which consists of 27 coral islands, became an Australian Territory in 1955. The first permanent settlement on the islands was in 1826, with a second settlement the following year. This second settlement was led by Captain Clunies-Ross - external site, who was keen to use the island's coconut supplies to produce coconut husks and oil. In 1886, Queen Victoria granted all land on the islands to George Clunies-Ross (the third descendant of Captain Clunies-Ross) and his heirs for eternity. Cocos Islands


The islands served as a communications and transport link during both World Wars. They were attacked by the German cruiser Emden in World War I and the Japanese during World War II. In 1978 the Australian government purchased from Mr John Cecil Clunies-Ross the remainder of his property on the islands with the exception of his house on Home Island (which was purchased by the government in 1993). Cocos Islands