Posts Tagged ‘Western Australia’

Great Australian Bars and Pubs

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Where To Grab A Drink While Down Under

By: Karen Halabi

Next time you’re passing through a country town, head for the wide verandahs and cheery atmosphere of the local pub. Here you’ll discover the soul of a town; it’s where the beer is cold and the yarns are spun.

Bars and Pubs in Australia

New South Wales
Apart from the legendary Pub With No Beer, NSW is dotted with quirky and colourful character pubs.

In the tiny township of Tilpa, 130km north of Wilcannia, in far west NSW, there’s a classic pub called the Tilpa Hotel. The interior of this old corrugated iron pub is plastered with graffiti from its many adorning fans. And, for a $2 donation to the Royal Flying Doctor Service, you too can leave your mark on the pub’s tin wall.

In nearby Broken Hill, call into the Palace Hotel, the historic, three-story pub with long verandas and elaborate cast-iron balustrades featured in the movie, Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, or visit the Silverton Hotel in the former mining ghost town, known for great hospitality and quirky locals.

Then, hit the Pacific Highway and head north to possibly our most famous pub of all. As country singer Slim Dusty once lamented “There’s nothin’ so lonesome, so dull or so drear, than to stand in the bar of a pub with no beer”. But as legend has it that’s exactly what happened at this historic pub in Taylors Arm on the north coast of NSW. While the debate still rages as to whether this pub was in fact the inspiration for the song, one thing is for sure — with the addition of a new brewery the pub’s valuable liquid asset will never run dry again.

A little further north you’ll come across The Billi Pub in historic Billinudgel, the former home of Australia’s oldest publican, a woman by the name of Mar Ring.

Mar Ring was publican for 53 years until the age of 101. She taught former Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke how to pull a beer, and was awarded an M.B.E. for community service. A painting of her still hangs over the public bar. This timber pub in the Brunswick Valley of Northern NSW, close to Byron Bay, is steeped in history, with many photos of the old township along with a good collection of memorabilia. The Billi is a good old country pub with tall stories and a friendly atmosphere, much the way it would have been in the early days.

Queensland
From Billinudgel you can head out west via Goondiwindi to Nindigully, just across the border into Queensland.

Walking into the rustic Nindigully Pub is like walking into the lounge room of the Outback. This quintessential Outback pub on the banks of the Moonie River has been the meeting point for locals for well over 100 years. It’s famous for the more than 140 Akubra hats from local farmers and stockmen which adorn the walls. Queensland’s oldest hotel, it was issued a license in 1864 after it had been shearers’ accommodation for Nindigully Station and is still in its original condition.

From here you can head north to Roma where the historic 1863 Romavilla Winery is a rarity – an Outback winery. Sample the local wines in the rustic timber and corrugated iron building, and imagine the hardships establishing a winery here.

From Roma take the Matilda Highway north through historic Outback towns such as Blackall, Barcaldien and Longreach to Winton.

Legend has it that Australia’s best known and much loved national song and the nation’s unofficial national anthem, Waltzing Matilda, was sung for the very first time at the North Gregory Hotel in Outback Winton in north-west Queensland. The Tattersalls Hotel in Winton has also been serving up genuine Outback hospitality for 120 years and is a top spot to share an icy beer with locals including miners, station owners, ringers, truck drivers, cattle buyers and shearers.

A little further north along the Matilda Highway through Outback Queensland be sure to stop and drink a toast to Australia’s hardest working dog, the blue heeler, at the Blue Heeler Hotel in Kynuna, the 100-year-old hotel where Banjo Patterson observed champagne being handed through the window to end the angry shearers strike of the 1800s. The Combo Waterhole, the famed billabong featured in Waltzing Matilda, is 20km south of Kynuna.

On the same Outback highway headed north towards Mt Isa you’ll meet locals as colourful as Mick Dundee over an ice cold beer in the historic Walkabout Creek Hotel in McKinlay in Outback Queensland. It’s famous as Crocodile Dundee’s regular drinking spot in the original movie of the same name. Known originally as the Federal McKinlay Hotel it was sold for $290,000 after the movie was made and is now the town’s one tourist attraction.

One of Australia’s most legendary watering holes is the Birdsville Hotel on the desolate Birdsville Track in Outback Queensland near the South Australian border. Built in 1884 it has been witness to history made, yarns spun and the survival of Australian mateship. It epitomises the essence of the Outback.

But even without heading so far Outback you can see some great Aussie pubs by sticking to the Pacific Highway. If you’re passing through Brisbane, stop off at the Story Bridge Hotel (formerly know as Kangaroo Point Inn), one of only a few hotels to feature architecture from the quintessential Queenslander period. Built in 1886, it’s famous for its Australia Day Cockroach Races.

Further north up the Pacific Highway on the Sunshine Coast is historic Eumundi. There is something special about a country Queensland pub with their wide balconies and timber lattice work shading dimly lit bars and swirling ceiling fans and Joe’s Waterhole (formerly The Commercial Hotel) in Eumundi is one of these treasures.

Rockhampton is Australia’s beef capital. The Great Western Hotel here is widely regarded as the home of great steak, beer and rodeos. This 116 year old pub plays host to major national rodeos and features a huge undercover rodeo arena for 1,000 people that attracts champion riders to the hotel, which also has a Saddler and Poker Saloon and Mavericks Western Wear Shop.

South Australia
The only stopover on the 528km Birdsville Track, the Mungerannie Hotel sits on the edge of the Sturt Stony, Simpson, Tirari and Strzelecki deserts and is nestled beside the Derwent River – an oasis in sharp contrast to its surrounds.

Right in the heart of Burke and Wills explorer country, the Innamincka Hotel at Cooper Creek in South Australia once played host to early drovers who brought cattle down the Strzelecki Track. The pub’s convivial Outamincka Bar has become the stuff of bush legends and is must stop for anyone travelling in these parts.

You can’t get more Outback than the famous Prairie Hotel at Parachilna in South Australia. Built in the 1890s, the pub attracts visitors from all over the world who come to try the renowned Australian native cuisine or bush tucker, otherwise known as ‘feral food’, while drinking in the view of the magnificent Flinders Ranges.

The William Creek Pub is located smack bang in the middle of the world’s largest cattle property, Anna Creek Station which, at 23,800 sq kms is almost half the size of Tasmania. William Creek is South Australia’s smallest town. The William Creek Pub has an almost legendary status and is the only watering hole on the Oodnadatta Track between Marree and Oodnadatta.

On South Australia’s Darling River is the picturesque town of Pooncarie. With only 89 residents, a general store and a pub built in 1976, the town has a lovely old country town feel. But the first Saturday in October sees the town swell to around 1,500 people for the annual Pooncarie races. People come from all over the country, and of course they drink at the old Telegraph Hotel.

Tasmania
In a beautiful little valley called Pyengana you’ll come across a sign that says, “Pub in a Paddock 3km - Come and see our Beer Drinking Pig”.  The Pub in the Paddock is surely one of Australia’s quirkiest pubs. This 1880s watering hole sits in the middle of a paddock in Tasmania’s Pyengana Valley and is famous for its beer swilling pig, Priscilla, who can scull a watered-down stubby in seven seconds. In a pen out the back the sign says, “Hi, Geez I’m dry, I’d luv a beer”. The owner claims the pig has downed 76 stubbies in on session, “more than Boonie”. A Tasmanian institution since 1880, the pub offers hearty country meals and comfortable accommodation.

Northern Territory
The colourful Daly Waters Pub, clad in corrugated iron, is crammed with decades of Australian memorabilia. Once a popular drover’s rest, this quirky pub built in 1930, gained fame again as a stopover for pilots and passengers arriving on the new Qantas airline in 1934. Today, it is a pit-stop for thirsty tourists travelling the Explorer’s Way between Alice Springs and Darwin.

At The Mataranka Pub at Mataranka Springs just south of Katherine you can lean against the bar with its brightly coloured paintings then toddle off to see the nearby replica of the hut in which Jeannie Gunn lived at Elsey Station. Her story was captured in the book We of the Never Never.

The Humpty Doo Hotel in Arnhem Land is conveniently located for travellers heading to Kakadu. The hotel has many colourful local characters, so stop in at the famous Humpty Doo Hotel when next in this part of the world.

At the Barra Bar & Bistro on the Kakadu Highway at Jim Jim, you can cook your own local delicacies on a supplied barbecue with an accompanying buffet.

Just south of Darwin on the Darwin River Road at Berry Springs,  you’ll find the Lichfield Pub, home of the bull arena and shed, which has a 180ft long bar.

Western Australia
Over on our West Coast, The Roey, Broome’s oldest pub, lives by the saying “if it’s going to happen in Broome, it’s going to happen at the Roey”. If you stumble across a local character by the name of Swindle, pull up a chair and order a coldie because he has enough tales about pearling and gangsters to last a week.

While sunset camel rides on Broome’s Cable Beach are world famous, it’s the tales about beer drinking camels that draw attention at the Whim Creek Pub.  Half way between Karratha and Port Hedland, this pub has its own wildlife sanctuary and was once home to a camel with a penchant for beer. Don’t worry about missing the pub – it’s painted bright pink!

The biggest and best known pub in Kalgoorlie is The Exchange. It holds the record for the biggest volume of Jim Beam sold in regional WA. It was originally constructed as a shed in the late 1800s.

The population of the small goldmining town of Kookynie, 200km from Kalgoorlie in Western Australia, is less than 10 people, but the town’s 1894 vintage Grand Hotel with its big verandahs and spacious rooms continues to survive. It was once the favourite watering hole for local prospectors.

True Australian country hospitality is alive and well in our great Aussie pubs. Whatever the style of accommodation or the location, the locals will greet you with a firm hand shake and a strong stare. Our great Aussie pubs are about the people and the places, and they’re the heart of our nation.

Australia and International Lighthouse Day

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

A Beacon of Light

By: Phoenix Arrien

Tomorrow and over the weekend, the Cape Leeuwin Lighthouse will celebrate International Lighthouse Day.

Located on the southwest coast of Western Australia, it is still a working lighthouse today. Cape Leeuwin will also celebrate 100 years of uninterrupted meteorological surveillance - longest for any lighthouse in Australia, making its records a fascinating case study for climate change scientists.

Celebrations will begin tomorrow and end on the Sunday with guest speakers from the bureau of meteorology and old lighthouse keepers. It will be an incredible weekend of stories, history and the elements!

See www.MargaretRiver.com for more information.

Sea Tails continued: Hauling The Leeuwin Lines

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

Sailing in Australia 

By: Phoenix Arrien There is something special about pulling away in a sailing ship from an old sailing port like West Australia’s Albany. Mebbe ‘tis the unknown adventure or mebbe the steppin’ into the shoes of ageless heroes. The sea calls, beckoning one to be tested, to discover new lands and find out what is over the horizon. Under the horizon is sea sickness. I am not feeling so great clinging to this mast and finally I have to be personally escorted down the mast by a seasoned crew member. Looks like I am really just a landlubber under this course, rugged exterior. We (the short-term crew) are put into four groups and each of usis a little jigsaw piece of a group, which is itself a jigsaw piece of the whole picture. The four groups look after different parts of the ship, be it the Stay, Main, Top, Square, or Mizzen sails or the various ropes (lines) that need to be hauled, eased, held, dragged or coiled. Booms swing, orders call, shouted and repeated; people run and climb. There are grunts and gasps of effort, calls made for more people, groups mould and separate, reform and splinter again. The great ship groans and turns in a mighty arc; wind - that mighty master that even the captain is slave to at times, often changes direction, or dies laughing. Sometimes it’s an insatiable mistress and slapps the sails demanding more cloth to fill. More sails unfurls, the boat leaps into the water like a stallion going for a mare, plunging hard before rearing up again. Later we stand back savouring the achievement with adrenaline coursing through our bodies. Great smiles flash and the group stands in bonded aftermath. Then the cook’s mate calls and we all pour into the main saloon, Mate and Bosun would go to off ‘ter their other duties and the captain disappear to ‘is Lordship’s captainly pursuits. Satisfaction reigns supreme.   

Experience Kalbarri, Australia

Friday, October 19th, 2007

By: Sarah Monteith

Kalbarri is a place in Australia where one end of town is a seashells throw from the other and a walk to the main road will take you no longer than fifteen minutes and in that time you are likely to be greeted by a few friendly locals and perhaps a few more friendly flies. Car parks are made from compacted red dirt and there is a notable absence of shoe-wearing, however what this town lacks in class and quality it makes up for in character and natural beauty.

Leaving the bustle of the city behind, the only sky scrapers here are the towering gorge’s shaped and hollowed by the winds that blow across the waters and are thick with heat and salt. The sweltering summer heats excuse the casual beach attire worn from sunrise to bed time and the sand on the floors of the weatherboard houses is rarely swept, we will only bring back more from the beach tomorrow.

Some say that the Sun God lives on this unspoiled coastline. His temple is the beach which visitors ritually lay themselves upon. Music of waves crashing filters through the sea side town where all roads lead to the beach. Kalbarri is sandwiched between thousands of kilometers of vast desert and farming properties to the east and the Indian Ocean and Murchison River to the West. Being located 591km north of Perth, the capital city of Western Australia, ensures that only a handful of tourists travel the distance to the pristine northern coastline.

The people of Kalbarri enjoy their early starts, with a buzz of activity going on in town by the time the sun has cast its first shimmer on the water of the Murchison. The first hot loaves of bread sit warm on the shelves by 6am and for the amusement of children, pelican feeding starts at seven. This morning productivity is for two reasons. The first is that by around lunch time the gusty sea breeze blows in from the west which makes the afternoon a little uncomfortable. The other reason, being that the people of Kalbarri have a great appreciation for their majestic sunsets and afternoons are a time to unwind and literally soak up the sun. It seems as though this town runs to its own pace that is created by the elements and the relaxed approach to life.

Recommended by the West Australian Tourist Bureau as a sight seeing town, Kalbarri hosts its fair share of spectacular activities. Take a Fishing Charter, Scenic Flight, Coach Tour of the Murchison Gorge, Horse or Camel Ride, Windsurf on the river or try any one of Kalbarri’s many other features or attractions including the Wildflower Centre or Rainbow Jungle.

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Visiting Perth and Western Australia

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

A lot of folks miss checking out Western Australia. When we were filming for the development of OZtralia.tv, we had a nice visit to Perth.

Perth is about a six hour flight from Eastern Australia. With that said, there is an exciting community that you really should check out if you are planning on traveling to Western Australia.

Fremantle use to be the largest city on the Eastern Coast of Australia. Perth soon became built up and down is much larger than the little Fremantle.

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