australia
Australia: the ultimate family adventure
Australia is new and old, gentle and bold. That’s how a lot of travel folks put it: a “land of contrasts”. Despite the cliche, they’re not wrong. This, after all, is home to both an ancient living culture and a forward-looking cosmopolitanism straddled across the largest, and probably most beautiful, island in the world. Big places contain multitudes. That’s another saying from the books. But we think that things can get lost in translation (despite the shared language), because Australia – far-flung and ferociously beautiful – is bigger and stranger than the Sydney Opera House and scorched red earth (Editor’s note: these things are of course totally beautiful). Freycinet, the Blue Mountains, and the Whitsundays tell another story – one that’s wholesome and hidden, and that really knows how to look after families. This trip – which we’ve been finessing like a glass of Tasmanian Riesling (which you’ll love) – will greet you like an old friend, but it also has a lot of surprises up its Antipodean sleeve. It’s a little city, a lot of unfiltered nature, and plenty time to reconnect.When
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Melbourne
Italian delis, Middle Eastern markets, flat white laneways, and cool-as-a-cucumber bars that give Brooklyn a run for its money, Melbourne is easy on the eye and unapologetically at ease with itself. The dining here is superb, the galleries first class, the neighborhoods sparkling, and the gardens and greenspaces heavenly and abundant. You’ll fit right in.
Freycinet National Park, Tasmania
When Robert McKimson first drew his Tasmanian Devil for Looney Tunes in 1954, he set something in motion. Tasmania came to us through our TV sets as a whirlwind of cacti, red earth, and swirling dust. Tasmania itself – home of the very real, very beautiful, and very bountiful Freycinet National Park – will redraw your memories, one glass of OJ at a time. You’ve put the city behind you (for now). Here’s the legendary home of Wineglass Bay, oyster farms, Capes, wine, and – yes – the eponymous Tasmanian Devil itself.
Sydney
Sydney proves that a whole city can be an icon. Famously warm, welcoming, bohemian, and culinary. Anthony Bourdain loved it – and said “it’s only getting better”. And this was in 2012. You’ll know the Sydney Opera House by reputation – but this is your chance to take a look around.
The Whitsundays
Many, many millennia ago, a prehistoric coastal range was swallowed by rising Ice Age seas. The 74 islands of the Whitsunday Passage are formed by the peaks of those mountains. It’s a reminder that Australia, and the world, is an ancient and ever-changing place. Even then, the Whitsundays – with their forests, beaches, and reefs – don’t feel changeable. In fact, this is a place where you can let time slip away.