Nature Australia

Experience the transformative power of outback Australia in the Red Centre and the Kimberley in Western Australia. Snorkeling with brilliant fish and coral on the Great Barrier Reef in Queensland. See koalas, kangaroos, wallabies, sea lions, pelicans and penguins on Kangaroo Island, a haven for wildlife of Australia. Find wetlands and waterfalls of Kakadu National Park, home to a third of all Australian birds. Or step back in time in the Daintree Rainforest, where some Australian plants dates back to Gondwanaland. Between May and September, you can see whales along the wildflowers that live in Western Australia.
Picture
Red Centre
Red Centre

You probably already know about the red monolith in the Red Centre of Australia. You probably know this stone sacred to the local Aboriginal community, and reflect amazing colors when the sun rises and sets. You may not know that you can see it through the eyes of Aboriginal people, or there are many other sacred places and amazing here in central Australia wide. Uluru Kata Tjuta which is just 40 kilometers from here and you will find an amazing Kings Canyon not far from Alice Springs. You may not realize there are landscape greenery and pools of water are beautiful, dusty red roads and huge stone slabs. And what may not truly understand until you get here is the magic, majesty, silence and isolation of Australia's Red Centre.
After 18 months of above average rainfall, Australia’s usually bone dry ‘Red Centre’ is blossoming. Uluru Kata Tjuta National Park is more lushly green than usual, even for the post-rains season.

These photos of flowers were predominantly taken in the vicinity of Uluru (Ayers Rock), surrounding that red monolith with a garden that offers huge variety, luxuriant greenery and exquisite flora.

There are so many flowers, including the carpets of Billy Buttons (Yunpayi-Yunpayi in the Warlpiri language – Calocephalus platycephalus if you’re botanically minded) around the rock pictured above.In the morning the air smells sweet as honey and that’s thanks to the Honey Grevillia (Kaliny-kalinypa is the common name  - Grevillea eriostachya), which casts its golden candles on long arms above the bleached white Soft Spinifex or Tjanpi (Triodia pungens). In fact the flowers of the Grevillea plants contain honey – you can just suck it out. Local Australian Aboriginal people use it to sweeten water.


Picture
Kimberley
Kimberley

Camel ride at sunset along Cable Beach in Broome beach and a plane across the top of the Bungle Bungle Ranges. Explore Lake Argyle and see tides higher than homes in the Buccaneer Archipelago. Four wheel drive along the Gibb River Road through the gorges and rivers, or follow the red dirt road from Broome to the remote Dampier Peninsula. Welcome to the Kimberley - a world of vast horizons, ancient gorges, weird rock formations, rock pools and golden beaches.

Picture
Kangaroo Island
Kangaroo Island

See native wildlife in the wild on Kangaroo Island ecological paradise. Seeing pink pelicans circling in the sky, seals lying on the sand at Seal Bay and the sleepy koalas in trees. Sitting on the sand and watched onggokkan flock of little penguins mate venturing into the sea every night at Penneshaw. Pack your fresh farm results - from Ligurian honey to the chicken and the egg - and the wines produced by 30 farmers from Cape Willoughby to Kingscote. Overnight at accommodation facilities inherited from the past and a look at some of South Australia's first lighthouse at Cape Willoughby, Cape Borda and Cape du Couedic. Swimming on a deserted beach at Stokes Bay, Vivonne Bay and surf fishing at Emu Bay. Take a trip with a beautiful view towards the underground caves at Kelly Hill Conservation Park and Remarkable Rocks in Flinders Chase National Park.

Picture
Great Barrier Reef
Great Barrier Reef

You can swim, snorkel, dive and sail on the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage listed, a living masterpiece so big it can be seen from space. Coral reef stretches more than 2,000 kilometers along the Queensland coast, from the mainland town of Port Douglas to Bundaberg. Move between islands natural palm-fringed at the top, and then explore the islands of the rainbow-colored reefs and marine life at the bottom.




Leave a Reply.