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Where we’ve been

Aboriginal Culture Australia Australian Wildlife Bali Bangkok Business Travel California Chicago coral reef crocodiles Cultural History eco-tourism Elephants Endangered Species Endangered Wildlife Fraser Island Gourmet dining Great Barrier Reef Hawaii Humpback Whales Indonesia Islamic Culture Italy Myanmar New Zealand Northern Territory Organic food Oslo Polynesia Queensland Rutherglen Scuba diving Shopping SouthEast Asia South Island sustainable tourism Sustainable Travel Thailand Tigers Turkey USA Victoria Vietnam Volcanoes Wine Tourism

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1

The dingos of Fraser Island aren’t the only stars.

The sand is moving. Tonnes of it are constantly shifting inland swept along by relentless winds. There’s no vegetation to be seen on the Stonetool Sand Blow. Like a silica glacier from another planet, it’s an inspirational vista that Frank Herbert may have had in mind when he created the planet Arrakis for his classic science fiction novel ‘Dune’. No human footprints either. This sand blow stretches from Fraser Island’s eastern shore for at least a kilometre. From my vantage point one hundred or so metres abo ve, it resembles a wide river of sun-dappled gold fringed by olivine paperbark forest. My eyes are drawn to its inexorable motion.

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1

The Great Barrier Reef’s southernmost island offers some of the world’s best diving. Close to Wide Bay and its annual Humpback whale migration it’s in the middle of some seriously big marine action.

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1

Airfares are at historic low prices. Hotels are begging for guests, rack rates are dropping faster than pants in Pattaya. Keen visitors are travelling to destinations previously off limits to all but the most intrepid, even foolhardy, travellers.

The commonly repeated dictum, ‘Tourists don’t remember where they’ve been. Travellers don’t care where they’re going’, is being challenged in ways that I don’t recollect encountering before.
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1

Dunkeld seems an unlikely town to choose for setting up one of the country’s best restaurants but as the Royal Mail Hotel’s first manager/sommelier Lok Thornton claimed in 2008, “We plan to be not only one of the ten best restaurants in Australia but in the world within a few years.”

No doubt this forecast has indeed put tiny Dunkeld on the map in a fashion it hasn’t enjoyed since it was a major stop on the Cobb and Co. route to Hamilton in the 1850s. Situated at the southern extremity of the Grampians (Gariwerd) National Park with stunning views to Mounts Sturgeon (Wuragarri) and Abrupt (Murdadjoog), Dunkeld’s scenic location certainly adds extra emphasis to overall visitor satisfaction.
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1

Middle East carrier Qatar Airways has waded into the increasingly heated debate about airport capacity in the southeast of England, urging the British government to give the go ahead for a third runway at Heathrow.

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