Cataract Gorge, Tasmania.
A short walk from downtown Launceston, and with ample help from the locals at hand, Cataract Gorge is an opportunity to immerse
yourself in Northern Tasmanian Culture.
This issue includes a day walk in Queensland’s Lamington National Park, a multi-day walk alongside camels at Lake Torrens in South Australia, a day hike to Mt Kosciuszko returning to Thredbo via Dead Horse Gap, two Tasmanian walks – the 30th anniversary of the Freycinet Walk, and walking with an elder in the Cataract Gorge, and a day walk to Bushrangers Bay and Cape Schanck in Victoria.
A short walk from downtown Launceston, and with ample help from the locals at hand, Cataract Gorge is an opportunity to immerse
yourself in Northern Tasmanian Culture.
Packed lunches of fresh local produce, swims, dramatic coastlines and world-class wines to close the day. The Mornington Peninsula strikes again.
With plants and animals largely unchanged from their ancestors in the fossil record, a walk through the World Heritage- listed Gondwana Rainforests is a chance to experience one
of the most ancient environments on earth.
What better way to reward the effort of seeing than going to country that dares you to think there’s nothing there?
One of the world’s most famous stretches of sand, lutruwita’s Freycinet National Park envelopes a legendary and luxurious lodge in its midst. You’ll still need your walking shoes, though.
A loop via the roof of Australia takes in sweeping alpine views before descending into
a verdant valley and following a cascading river.
Wherever and whenever we walk, we acknowledge and pay our respects to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the Traditional Custodians and Owners of the land.
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