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#1
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![]() My wife and I will visit the land under for about 3 weeks and would like to get some thoughts on what to do, see, and experience from people who has done it. We're starting off in Sydney for new years eve celebration and going from there. Obvisiosly, the reef and beach is a must, but which one?? I don't know if we'll be able to learn scuba in time, but are experienced snorklers. Where are some good shallow beaches with close by reefs to go snorkle in?
![]() Last edited by Willito; 11-16-2007 at 03:40 PM. |
#2
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![]() been twice , second time for the olympics and 7 months after. So in short here are the points that I recommend. if you have 3 weeks. Sydney 4-5 days-bondi beach a must and manly beach, take the ferry. Never went to Melbourne but the great ocean road is amazing. could drive to melbourne. 6-7 hours I think?? . Get a bus pass up the east coast. good for a month. take as many stops as you want. 2-3 days in Byron Bay.!!! the best trip of all was Fraser Island 4x4 on the largest sand island in the world, world heritage site. Lakes as clear as you can imagine. Google names for links to pictures. Then Surfers paradise for a few days, Cairns -great barrier reef. Cape tribulation. Awesome trip
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Gerad White Rock |
#3
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![]() Australia is a big country. It's a little like ... , well, actually, it's a *lot* like, if not *exactly* like saying, "I'm going to Canada. What should I see?"
Decide on what parts of the country you want to see, no way you're going to do all that you want to do in 3 weeks. Budget accordingly. Flying from Sydney to, say, Cairns will set you back several hundred dollars per seat. It's a 3 hour flight IIRC. Sydney is a really neat city. The harbor is amazing. Sydney is worth a few days stay. This is probably where you will have the best "beach" time this time of year. Watch out for the great white sharks though ![]() The Sydney Aquarium is really well done and worth a see IMHO. Queen Elizabeth park is one of the most amazing gardens I've ever visited. Watch out for the flying foxes. ![]() But to be honest, expect Sydney to suck a lot of your funds. When I stayed in Sydney (my sisters family lives near Sydney, they used to live IN Sydney but not anymore - so we had to hotel it). And yeah, um.. $300 a night. It was a really cool condo right on the water across from Luna Park, but yikes that was a pretty penny. The reef is a must see, but bear in mind that you cannot just walk off the beach and expect to see reef. In fact, this time of year, you can't go to the beach in Queensland, the box jellies are in season. Plus, the water is poo brown for several kilometres off shore. Don't plan on any beach time if you go to Queensland. Well, you can sit on the beach if nothing else, and I guess technically you can still go for a swim and just hope that the jelly nets hold. But they do get holes. And technically they can drift down south quite a ways. My nephew was stung by a box jelly near Ulladulla (NSW, south of Sydney). It looked like 3rd degree burns starting from his neck/shoulder, through his torso down to almost his knee. Pretty nasty stuff. Anyhow my point being, if you want to see the reef, you have to go on a boat and they will take you out on a daytrip. Or do a liveaboard, if your budget allows, do a 2-3 day trip out to the reef. Any real reef you might have seen, is chump change once you see the GBR and other South Pacific reefs. In terms of reefing in the South Pacific, Papua New Guinea ("PNG") is roughly "ground zero", the further you get away from it, the less diverse the reef gets. So PNG, Indonesia, Australia, etc. reefs are really the pinnacle. I myself would not go to Australia and not go plan on spending at least a week in North Queensland. When I was last there, I stayed between Cairns and Port Douglas, and actually planned my reef excursions out of Port Douglas. However, I'm told that nowadays Port Douglas has become quite trendy among the rich set and the famous of Australia and so has become priced accordingly. Think Banff but worse. ![]() Townsville also has an aquarium, the Great Barrier Reef Aquarium. It's probably worth seeing although I haven't seen it myself. But it's referenced in a couple of my reefing books (can't remember if I saw it in Fossa and Nilsen, or Delbeek and Sprung, but those kinds of reefing books). What else can I tell you ?? Man, I've already written a novel. Other things to consider seeing: Kangaroo Island, Fraser Island, Heron Island, if your budget allows. These are all on my "places I have to go see one day" list. Uluru (formerly known as "Ayers Rock"), The Twelve Apostles ... also neat to see, but probably unrealistic to get to if you plan on spending any time already in Sydney and Queensland. Adelaide and Brisbane areas also offer spectacular beaches. And spectacular surfing, if you're into surfing. Melbourne is a pretty neat city. Like Adelaide though, these cities are sort of on the wrong side of Sydney if you want to go north from Sydney. You can do it but it depends on how rushed you want to be. Hope I've given you some fodder for thought. ![]()
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#4
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![]() Just a quick note to back up what Tony had to say about the reefs. The diving (and snorkeling) is fantastic on the Barrier Reef, but it is no where close to shore except way up in the north. North of Port Douglas the reef starts to get near land, but I don't know if water clarity is better up there. Probably not since they get tons of rain north of Cairns. Myself, I did a three day live-aboard dive trip out of Airlie Beach and it was well worth it.
There were lots of dive-sail trips out of that area back in 1995 so I'm sure there are still lots of operators, and there would be some snorkeling trips as well. Once you get to Cairns and north I expect that you could probably get to the reef and back on a day trip. |
#5
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![]() I worked on reef-jet out of airlie beach for a bit. 2 hours by high powered jet boast/ferry/ So reefs are not close to land. Live aboard if I were to do it again. you would also go to the coral sea . further off the coast equals better diving less impact from tourists than closer sites.
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Gerad White Rock |
#6
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![]() If you haven't seen this thread over at RC, give it a look. I guarantee after seeing these pictures you won't pass over going on a dive trip there.
![]() http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/sh...hreadid=980833 It took me a solid hour to go through all 15 pages and that was averaging 2 to 5 seconds per photo. This guy is a prolific photog ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#7
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![]() Man!! That guy's living the live...if he wasn't a student.
![]() Thanks everyone for the great info. I had no idea the reef was that far off shore. I guess the northeast coast is where the reef is most accessible, so I'll plan my trip there. If snorkling was my only option, what would you recommend? A day trip out or a live-aboard? Can you explain what a live-aboard is and how much would I be looking at? There seems to be way too many things to do/see on one visit, we will have a tough time deciding. I was browsing online and came across a load of tour companies, each varying in location, duration, price etc. My dilema is, are they worth the money and time? Has anyone been on one, what did you think of it? Also, driving, did anyone rent a car while they were there? |
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