Everyone knows the classics Australian walks, such as the Tasmania’s
Overland Track and the Larapinta in the Northern Territory, but here are
seven that should be on your to-do ‘list’.
1. Growling Swallet, Mt Field National Park, Tasmania
Growling Swallet is the quirky name of one of Tasmania’s
least-visited natural treasures, a mouth-like hole down which the Junee
River disappears into a limestone cave system and which growls when
there’s lots of water.
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An easy drive from Hobart, it’s accessed through plantation
forest so you need to collect a gate key from the Mt Field Visitor
Centre and pay a security deposit.
2. Manly Scenic Walkway, Sydney
You don’t need multi-millions to enjoy the best of Sydney Harbour. A few dollars on public transport buys you an unforgettable day on the Manly Scenic Walkway.[post_ads_2]
This 11-kilometre trail from Spit Bridge to Manly strings together rocky coves and sandy beaches, wildflower-festooned national park and cliff-top lookouts, marinas and affluent suburbs.
3. Mt Eccles, Portland, Victoria
The name suggests a comedy act rather than a cataclysmic drama but Mt Eccles, near Portland in Victoria’s far southwest, is the product of one of the state’s last volcanic eruptions, about 10,000 years ago.[post_ads_2]
A 9-kilometre loop walk takes you down a collapsed lava canal, under a natural bridge and around the rim of the lake-filled crater.
You’re almost guaranteed to see koalas here too.
4. George Driscoll Sea to Summit Walk
Adelaide’s 35-kilometre George Driscoll Sea to Summit Walk was designed as a one-day challenge but is more fun and family-friendly trod over two days in the reverse direction.[post_ads_2]
Working its way through national parks, nature reserves and leafy suburbs between Mt Lofty and Kingston Park Beach, the walk celebrates the city’s abundant greenery, the earliest of which were reserved by Colonel William Light, the Colony of South Australia’s first Surveyor-General.
5. Wadjemup Bidi, Rottnest Island
The indigenous name and history of Perth’s offshore playground, Rottnest Island, is being acknowledged in the new Wadjemup Bidi (completion due 2018).[post_ads_2]
Five integrated sections of easy-to-moderate walking track totalling 45 kilometres present Rotto’s maritime, penal and military history against a background of coastal scenery.
You’ll encounter countless cute quokkas too.
6. Keep River National Park, NT-WA border
Keep River National Park, off the Victoria Highway just shy of the NT-WA border, is a gem of a stopover for eating the food you can’t take further west and stretching your legs.The Jarnem Loop, the longest (8km) and best of the walking trails, traverses a timeworn range and a bloodwood-studded plain and threads through beehive domes to a faded aboriginal art site.
Lucky amblers will see exquisite leopard-spotted small pond dragonflies.
7. Fraser Island, Queensland
Famous for beaches, perched lakes, tall timbers and the 4WD adventuring involved in exploring it, Fraser Island is also a walker’s paradise.[post_ads_2]
One of Queensland’s ten Great Walks snakes 90km up the middle but there are also day walks, none better than a 19km inland loop through vine forest and giant satinay trees starting/ending at exquisitely blue Lake McKenzie.
Keep watch in moister forest for surprisingly blue fungi.
Source: australiantraveller.com