Archive for the ‘Australia Eco Friendly Tourism’ Category

Coober Pedy, The World’s Opal Capital

Friday, February 27th, 2009

More Than 70% Of The World’s Opals Come From Coober Pedy

By: Christina Pfeiffer

Around 70 per cent of the world’s opal is chipped out of the ground in Coober Pedy. So it comes as no surprise that the South Australian Outback town is a regular stop for savvy opal dealers from Hong Kong who travel there several times a year to choose the best stones.

Opal Capital

“It’s not uncommon for 20 to 30 Hong Kong buyers to be wandering around town each month. Most of us own dugout homes and keep cars here,” says Jacky Lam from Hong Kong’s Wing Wah Opal Company.

Opal was discovered in 1915 but it wasn’t until the 1960s that hundreds of enthusiastic young men from Europe flocked to Coober Pedy to mine small parcels of land.

After decades of mining, the opal fields are covered with mounds of debris from prospecting shafts and the hills are a warren of underground dwellings. These homes range from one-room hand-dug bed-sits to rambling subterranean mansions furnished with swimming pools, solid gold bathroom fixtures and wine cellars.

More than 60 per cent of the town’s 3,500-plus residents live underground. In summer, when outside temperatures reach a sizzling 50°C, these underground homes keep cool (around 22 - 26°C) while in winter, the snug dugouts keep its occupants warm without the need for artificial heating.

One of Coober Pedy’s attractions is Faye Naylor’s Underground Home, which was dug out 40 years ago by a single woman. Naylor was the first to come up with the idea of turning her cramped bed sit into an underground home. Today, her display home has five rooms, a wine cellar and a swimming pool.

Visitors keen to shop for opals will not be disappointed as there are several underground opal shops in town. At the Umoona Opal Mine & Museum, visitors can wander through underground tunnels and scour display cabinets in the showroom for rings, earrings and necklaces.

Opal mining is addictive. “Once you find opal, you just can’t stop”, says Guenther Wagner, a former travel photographer from Germany. Guenther visited Coober Pedy on a photographic assignment 38 years ago and is still there. He runs the Down ‘n Dirty Opal Tour where visitors armed with hard hats, torches and hand picks are allowed to hack at the walls of the Opal Quest Mine for a chance of finding opal.

Over 45 nationalities live in Coober Pedy. There are two a-la-carte restaurants, a Chinese restaurant, pizza parlours and cafes. The popular Tom & Mary’s Greek Taverna is a hub of activity at dinner time. Also worth visiting are the underground churches and art galleries.

Almost everything is brown, including the 18-hole Coober Pedy Opal Fields Golf Course which provides reciprocal rights for its members to play nine holes in St. Andrews’ Balgove course in Scotland. The catch is this only applies during the month of January when the Scottish weather is inclement.

The one patch of green luxury in town is the football field, which is put to good use during the annual Opal Festival. Croatians, Serbians, Bosnians and Greeks can be found relaxing over a friendly beer while cooking lamb on the spit.

To capture the ambience of opal mining, wander through the tunnels in the Old Timers Mine, an opal mine discovered in 1916. The dimly lit tunnels are a mining museum filled with life-sized mannequins positioned to educate visitors about the daily life of an opal miner. It’s an eye-opening experience to learn how miners crouched in tiny grottos, climbed shafts using rough foot holes hand-picked into the walls and wheeled around heavy barrows of dirt.

Coober Pedy’s stark landscape has captured the imagination of apocalyptic filmmakers who left props (such as a huge alien spaceship which sits parked in front of the Opal Cave underground complex) from movies such as Red Planet and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. For movie buffs interested in walking in the footsteps of Olivia Newton John, Mel Gibson and Val Kilmer, Coober Pedy might be just the spot.

South Australia’s Plastic Bags

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

South Australia Leads The Way

By: Phoenix Arrien

The state of South Australia (SA) is phasing out plastic bags and I believe the other Australian states should follow. SA is also the state in Australia offering cash-back for bottles and cans.

In fact, let the world follow. Not that SA is the only place in the world to do this: San Francisco and China are two that come to mind.

Imagine if all of Australia banned plastic bags: we would see five billion plastic bags less in our landscapes and oceans. The birds, whales, seals and turtles out there that are hurt and choked by such items would be much happier as well.

Travelers can do their bit by refusing plastic bags when offered at shops anywhere. Take along the backpack or material bag and reuse.

Australia Climate Change

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Austrlia and Climate Change

By: Phoenix Arrien

The first draft of the long awaited ‘Climate Change Review’ from Ross Garnaut is out and it reminds me of that John Lennon song:

‘And so this is Christmas
And what have you done?’

Just like we know Christmas is coming around in December, we know we are falling into a global crisis created by climate change, created by carbon emissions, created by humanity. We know from yet another report that we are falling into a bottomless well of thirst, hunger, species extinction and general displacement at a fast rate.

Reports are all well and good but what now? Well, the Labour Party has distanced themselves from it a little, industry is scrabbling for damage control, environmentalists are pointing out that we knew much of it before, the Greens are using it as more fodder to push for political change and we on the streets are feeling a little overwhelmed by the enormity of the problem.

The report brings up a grim future for Australia and offers suggestions about what we can do about it. More ‘economic modelling’ will be available in August. What we do know now is that it needs to hit our hip pocket, it will slow the economy and create hardship.

We have been warned of this for years of course. The easy options are way in the past, when governments should have acted. Most of the actual activity to prepare ourselves for climate change and do something about the environment has been done at grass roots level. Carbon offsetting, planting trees, driving less, using green power, installing water tanks, recycling and so on, has been up to the individual and small communities.

Apart from feeling just a mite fearful about the future, many of us are tired of waiting for the government to do something that will make a big difference. We knew the previous Liberal government would not do anything, now we hear encouraging sounds from the new power and….?

The very problem with governments effectively dealing with this enormous problem is that by their very nature, they are focussed on the short-term. The most rapid effect that will be seen from taking positive action is going to be economic slow-down and grumblings from industry.

It is a rare government that will act for a country’s long term wellbeing because such short-term reactions usually jeopardises its chances at the next election.

No, governments are not going to do much. We need to stop wasting time hoping and keep expanding our individual, workplace and community actions.

And change the Chirstmas story in one respect: soon Santa Claus will not require a sled, because there will be no more snow.

Trouble on Virgin’s Island

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Richard Branson’s Australian Retreat

By: Phoenix Arrien

On a visit to Noosa on the east coast of Australia, I took a cruise through that region’s waterways and we passed a lovely-looking island with house on it. ‘Richard Branson’s island,’ said the guide.

The billionaire Virgin chief is building a luxury retreat for his staff on this island - called Makepeace Island - it is going be a two million pound, nine-hectare estate. Plans for a country club and helipad have been scrapped after environmental concerns.

The locals are still grumbling about the removal of trees and the 85-year-old timber house built in the classic ‘Queenslander’ style including wraparound porches.

Richard brought it for one million pounds in 2003. Nice to know those cheerful Virgin employees will have a swanky holiday hideout. Mind you, Noosa has plenty of swankiness.

More on that hip little town soon.

Australia’s Wild Ocean

Monday, June 9th, 2008

The Oceans of Australia

By: Phoenix Arrien

Well, we passed 2008 Environment Day last week so I am peppering this week’s posts with a few environmental thoughts. Today may be the day to mention an organisation to which I belong. The Wilderness Society is dedicated to helping preserve Australia’s wild places and one of their most interesting moves at the moment is to “secure some of our marine environment in fully protected marine parks, reduce the pressure from over-fishing, and help our amazing marine life to survive into the future for our kids and their kids to enjoy.”

A worthy mission eh?

Beyond the sandy beaches and rocky coastlines of this vast continent is an amazing underwater world, brimming with life, kelp forests, sponge gardens, coral reefs, turtles, dolphins, crabs, sea snails, and fish.

The Wilderness Society (TWS) have already had some campaign success resulting in fully protected marine parks for Ningaloo coral reef in WA, in parts of the Great Australian Bight off SA and in the Southern Ocean. TWS is slowly growing its marine campaign team around the country with active marine campaigns in New South Wales, South Australia, Western Australia, and the Northern Territory.

More information: www.wilderness.org.au/campaigns/

Follow Up: Australia’s First Carbon-Neutral Resort

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

Green Vacations in Australia

By: Phoenix Arrien

Australia is getting ‘green’…gradually. The sunny north-eastern state of Queensland has recently boasted about Australia’s first 100 percent solar powered and carbon neutral tourism operator.

Hidden Valley Cabins and Tours on the Paluma range - one and a half hours northwest of Townsville - now leads this country in a crucial environmental initiative. Ian and Bonnie McLennan use alternative natural power sources as well as purchasing carbon credits and using to offset any green house gases which are released.

It is a stand-alone operation drawing no support from a power grid. The McLennan’s have introduced a range of carbon-friendly initiatives including replacing conventional light bulbs with energy-saving compact fluorescent bulbs and minimising waste by compacting food and paper products for use in the garden.

Other green initiatives include educating guests and the public on the importance of protecting wildlife; building low impact walking tracks; recycling all aluminium cans, papers and cardboards; planting native trees and vegetation; and building with local timber.

The original Hidden Valley Cabins were established in 1982 to cater for timber cutters, tin miners and graziers in the area. Ian and Bonnie McLennan bought the resort 21 years ago, demolishing the existing buildings and rebuilding the entire resort.

The frame work and roof trusses are made from selectively logged local hard wood and the outside cladding on the buildings is railway sleeper off cuts which were commissioned to be burnt if not purchased by the McLennan’s.

The McLennan’s also undertook substantial revegetation to replace any native trees or plants lost in construction. A swag of awards has found its way to their wall and mantelpiece: Best Hosted Accommodation, Best New Tourism Development 2007 and a finalist in the 2007 Queensland Tourism Awards for best Hosted Accommodation.
Situated near Running River on the western slope of the Paluma range, it is home to varying species of birds, butterflies, wallabies, lace monitors, platypus and nocturnal animals.

If it’s time to experience a sustainable vacation in the tropics of Australia, check out www.hiddenvalleycabins.com.au

REEFS HAVE RIGHTS TOO!

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Australia’s Great Barrier Reef

Great Barreir Reef Scuba Diving

Photo Courtesy of Queensland Tourism  

 

By: Phoenix Arrien

One of the great wonders of the world is Australia’s Great Barrier Reef (GBR). If you haven’t visited this stretch of water running along the northeast coast it may be time to consider a trip.

The colours and textures - greens, reds, oranges and yellows. The smoothness of rocks and knobbly brittleness of the coral. Fish, eels, clams and all sorts of strange and wonderful life. It’s a different world down there.

However the GBR is in trouble. Bleaching due to warmer temperatures and pollution from agricultural run-off is having a terrible effect on this stunning area. It is sad that many of the world’s reefs are vulnerable. Pollution, overfishing, sedimentation and climate change are wreaking havoc.

The Reef Check Foundation is seeking one million signatures for their International Declaration of Reef Rights (www.reefcheck.org/petition/petition.php) so they can present it to the Heads of State of all countries with coral reefs - 101 of them apparently - at the end of 2008.

This year is the International Year of the Reef and as well as signing the petition we can help by:

-         Choosing sustainable seafood

-         Supporting reef-friendly hotels and tourism operators

-         Not rubbish the land because much of it will end up in the ocean including reefs

Reefs can recover in many ways, however it requires us all to be aware of their vulnerability, as well as their beauty.

A TIWI LOVE STORY

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

From Darwin To The Tiwi Islands

By: Phoenix Arrien

“Ponki!” the old Tiwi lady cried, “if you see two people fighting, just go up to them and say Ponki.” How could people keep fighting if this jovial old lady says the Tiwi word for Peace with such sincerity, delight and a wide toothless smile? The people who inhabit the two Tiwi Islands in the Arafura Sea north of Darwin on Australia’s northern coast, have an innocence and joy that breaks through to even the most jaded visitor.

A regular flight 80km north of Darwin, Australia by light plane takes 30 minutes to touch down at the little airstrip on Bathurst Island, the populated of the two islands and soon everyone is in Tiwi mode - relaxed and smiling.

Doreen was one of the islanders who used to show visitors the way to make colourful baskets as well as the painted barks of the island. After a smoking ceremony, she and others danced their dreaming animals

Doreen had run away from her parents on the other side of the island when she was six, taking her younger sister with her. They were to go and live with an old man as was the island tradition.

Until very recently the Tiwis believed that children are born when spirits enter the woman’s mouth, which could happen at any age. To make sure baby and mother are provided for, baby girls were married at birth to old men, in what was basically a business deal between the new husband and father. This created a surplus of single young men who were understandably frustrated and also understandably looked upon with suspicion. Even though the women were monitored carefully, liaisons in the bush occurred.

Little Doreen crossed the island and came to live in Nugiu, the main centre, where she married a man she loved and now dances her ‘dreamtime being’ - the crocodile!

The only way to see the island is on a tour which will take you to settlements, craft stores, cultural experiences and to the eerie burial sites sprinkled around its southern end. The person who coined the phrase “endless beaches” must have seen the island’s wide white sands that cradle the expanse of bright blue sea of this tropical paradise.

Australia’s First Carbon-neutral Resort

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Green Vacations in Australia

By: Phoenix Arrien

Want to travel to Australia and stay somewhere a little greener? A resort in the sunny north-eastern state of Queensland has become Australia’s first 100 percent solar-powered and carbon-neutral tourism operator.

Hidden Valley Cabins and Tours on the Paluma range - one and a half hours northwest of Townsville - now leads this country in a crucial environmental initiative. Owners Ian and Bonnie McLennan use alternative natural power sources as well as purchasing carbon credits and using to offset any green house gases which are released.

It is a stand-alone operation drawing no support from a power grid. The McLennan’s have introduced a range of carbon-friendly initiatives including replacing conventional light bulbs with energy-saving compact fluorescent bulbs and minimising waste by compacting food and paper products for use in the garden.

Other green initiatives include educating guests and the public on the importance of protecting wildlife; building low impact walking tracks; recycling all aluminium cans, papers and cardboards; planting native trees and vegetation; and building with local timber.

The original Hidden Valley Cabins were established in 1982 to cater for timber cutters, tin miners and graziers in the area. Ian and Bonnie McLennan bought the resort 21 years ago, demolishing the existing buildings and rebuilding the entire resort.

The frame work and roof trusses are made from selectively logged local hard wood and the outside cladding on the buildings is railway sleeper off cuts which were commissioned to be burnt if not purchased by the McLennan’s.

The McLennan’s also undertook substantial revegetation to replace any native trees or plants lost in construction. A swag of awards has found its way to their wall and mantelpiece: Best Hosted Accommodation, Best New Tourism Development 2007 and a finalist in the 2007 Queensland Tourism Awards for best Hosted Accommodation.

Situated near Running River on the western slope of the Paluma range, it is home to varying species of birds, butterflies, wallabies, lace monitors, platypus and nocturnal animals.

OZtralia: Seeing All of Australia

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Giving You The Best Australian Travel Experience

By: OZtralia.tv Staff

We are proud to continue to give you the best travel experience for Australia online.

From our video map, you can see all of Australia. But now, from our direct pages, we also give you a wealth of written information on every location we cover in Australia.

Below are links so you can check it all out yourself.

Watch videos and find information about
all the amazing Australia’s travel destinations:


» Great Barrier Reef and the Daintree Rainforest
» Sunshine Coast - Noosa
» Brisbane
» Canberra
» Melbourne
» Byron Bay and the Rainbow Valley
» Sydney
» Whitsunday-Overview
» Rainbow Valley
» Hobart and Southern Tasmania
» Northern Tasmania
» Perth and the Sunset Coast
» Cairns and Port Douglas
» Surfer’s Paradise and the Gold Coast
» Uluru
» The Great Ocean Road