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Luxury Down Under

Luxury Down Under

By Mark Johnson

From the prehistoric gorges of Kakadu National Park, to the white sails of the Sydney Opera House, Australia is a country as big your imagination.  Kick back on a beautiful beach, watch a dazzling performance at the Sydney Opera House, or immerse yourself in the world’s largest coral reef the Great Barrier Reef.  Australia truly has something for everyone and a place everyone should visit at least once in their lives.

Sydney Opera House

Inside are six auditoriums where dance, concerts, opera and theatre are staged, plus the left-of-centre Studio for emerging artists.  The acoustics are superb; the internal aesthetics like the belly of a whale.  The Sydney Opera House has a1000 rooms, 300 corridors and hundreds of tales and secrets.  Step inside the inspired venues where more than 1600 performances come to life each year.

Uluru 

Uluru in the heart of Australia is a striking rock monolith rising spectacularly from the desert plain. One of Australia's most popular tourist attractions, it was better known as Ayers Rock until its Aboriginal name, Uluru, became more popular.  The largest free standing rock in the world this is truly a site to see.

Great Barrier Reef

One of Australia's most remarkable natural gifts, the Great Barrier Reef is blessed with breathtaking beauty.  The reef contains an abundance of marine life and comprises of over 3000 individual reef systems and coral cays and literally hundreds of picturesque tropical islands with some of the world’s most beautiful sun-soaked, golden beaches.

Kakadu National Park

Kakadu National Park an Australian Natural Icon covers almost 20,000 square kms and is 257 kms East of Darwin the capital city of the Northern Territory, Australia.

Kakadu National Park is the largest national park in Australia.  It contains one of the highest concentrated areas of aboriginal rock art sites in the world; the most famous examples are at Nourlangie Rock and Ubirr.

The Blue Mountains

The Blue Mountains is a magical place any time of the year.  Glowing in autumn, cool in winter, colourful in spring and refreshing in summer.  The Blue Mountains are densely populated by oil bearing Eucalyptus trees.  The atmosphere is filled with finely dispersed droplets of oil, which, in combination with dust particles and water vapour, scatter short-wave length rays of light which are predominantly blue in colour. 

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