G'day All,
During our many years of travelling here in Australia we have met and formed close friendships with quite a few international visitors and I have often made the comment that you lot, especially tourists from the UK and also Germany see more of our vast country in a short time than most Australians see in a lifetime. However, most international visitors only see the coastal strip from Melbourne in the south to Cairns in the north and also the Red Centre to view Uluru and Kata Tjuta and then onto Darwin with a couple of days at Kakadu and then jump on a plane back home. I will attempt to give you a glimpse of some of the out of the way places that we go to in our travels.
Australia is a large landmass - approximately 7.5 million square kilometres and a fair chunk of it is uninhabited. It is the remote areas that we enjoy and to be able to visit these locations, trip planning and thorough preparation is paramount to not just a trouble free journey, but also survival at certain times of the year. From late 2007 to August 2008 we did an 18,000 km trip from our home in central Queensland to Western Australia and back and the highlight of that trip was traversing the Great Central Road ( GCR ) - over 1100 kms of bone jarring, teeth rattling, corrugated dirt road from Laverton WA through to Kata Tjuta ( The Olgas ) in Northern Territory. Below is a map showing our route with the black dotted line being the GCR.
Eventually the GCR will become an all weather road which along with the Donahue Highway in western Queensland, the Plenty, Stuart and Lassiter Highways in the Northern Territory will form another route to link the eastern states to the west. At the moment it is only accessible for the entire length by 4WD vehicles. It is generally out of bounds to rental vehicles due to the high cost of recovery in the event of breakdown or accident although we did come across a German couple in a rental 4WD ( 2 Fritz in a Britz ) on a very remote stretch of road who had no idea where they were going - I managed to convince them to turn around and go back or the chances were they would die out there. Below is a pic of terrain for most of the GCR.
More to follow ........
cheers
diesel
During our many years of travelling here in Australia we have met and formed close friendships with quite a few international visitors and I have often made the comment that you lot, especially tourists from the UK and also Germany see more of our vast country in a short time than most Australians see in a lifetime. However, most international visitors only see the coastal strip from Melbourne in the south to Cairns in the north and also the Red Centre to view Uluru and Kata Tjuta and then onto Darwin with a couple of days at Kakadu and then jump on a plane back home. I will attempt to give you a glimpse of some of the out of the way places that we go to in our travels.
Australia is a large landmass - approximately 7.5 million square kilometres and a fair chunk of it is uninhabited. It is the remote areas that we enjoy and to be able to visit these locations, trip planning and thorough preparation is paramount to not just a trouble free journey, but also survival at certain times of the year. From late 2007 to August 2008 we did an 18,000 km trip from our home in central Queensland to Western Australia and back and the highlight of that trip was traversing the Great Central Road ( GCR ) - over 1100 kms of bone jarring, teeth rattling, corrugated dirt road from Laverton WA through to Kata Tjuta ( The Olgas ) in Northern Territory. Below is a map showing our route with the black dotted line being the GCR.

Eventually the GCR will become an all weather road which along with the Donahue Highway in western Queensland, the Plenty, Stuart and Lassiter Highways in the Northern Territory will form another route to link the eastern states to the west. At the moment it is only accessible for the entire length by 4WD vehicles. It is generally out of bounds to rental vehicles due to the high cost of recovery in the event of breakdown or accident although we did come across a German couple in a rental 4WD ( 2 Fritz in a Britz ) on a very remote stretch of road who had no idea where they were going - I managed to convince them to turn around and go back or the chances were they would die out there. Below is a pic of terrain for most of the GCR.

More to follow ........
cheers
diesel
