Destinations
Australia
The Wonder of Down Under
Australia is a land of extraordinary contrasts, where ancient rainforests, sunburnt deserts, and dazzling coral reefs define one of the world’s most biodiverse destinations. The Great Barrier Reef teems with vibrant marine life, while Kakadu National Park showcases Indigenous rock art and crocodile-filled wetlands.
The Red Centre is home to Uluru, a sacred monolith rising from the Outback, and the rugged peaks of Tasmania shelter rare wildlife like the Tasmanian devil. Kangaroo Island is an untouched paradise, known for its pristine beaches and abundant marsupials. Whether diving, trekking, or wildlife spotting, Australia delivers nature at its most spectacular.
Best Times to Visit
April to September: Offers the best weather for Outback adventures and Kakadu safaris
June to November: Prime time for whale watching.
December to February: Perfect for beach lovers and Great Barrier Reef diving.
iconic wildlife
Kangaroos
Koalas
Wombats
Platypus
Cassowaries
How do you like your wild?
Let us create your dream Australia adventure
Reflecting On Flamingos
Laguna Chaxa, Chile
23° 19′ 41″ S / 68° 10′ 02″ W
— Art Wolfe
“It is in the wild places, where the edge of the earth meets the corners of the sky, the human spirit is fed.”
A Paradise Found Outback
TASMANIA
Where Wilderness Still Feels Near
Tasmania is an Australia safari in a different key—temperate forests, rugged coasts, and long, quiet distances where wildlife isn’t staged, it’s simply present. A significant portion of the island is protected, including the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, which helps keep many experiences low-impact by nature. If you’re researching an itinerary here, think “slow expedition”: walking, boating, and patient observation—often with the added intimacy of smaller visitor numbers than many marquee safari circuits.
Kangaroo Island
An Island, Done the Quiet Way
Kangaroo Island is a wildlife-first escape where the “safari” happens in close conversation with wind, sea cliffs, and open heath—often with more silence than signage. It’s an easy place to move slowly: dawn drives for macropods and birdlife, unhurried coastal walks, and guided encounters that keep the animals in charge. After the 2019–20 fires, parts of the island have become a living lesson in resilience—regrowth, renewal, and the long work of protection.
Exmouth
Where Desert Meets Living Reef
Exmouth is a rare kind of safari base: red-earth ranges behind you, a luminous reef in front of you, and marine wildlife that arrives on its own terms. The surrounding Ningaloo Coast is World Heritage–listed for its near-shore reef system and the way ocean and arid land ecosystems interlock. Done well, this is travel that trades spectacle for intimacy—expert-led time on the water, respectful distances, and a pace that lets encounters unfold naturally.
Northwest Territory
Wetlands, Red Earth, and Solitude
Australia’s Northern Territory (often called “the Top End”) is a safari of water and sky—vast floodplains, paperbark-lined billabongs, and wildlife that stays unapologetically wild. The experience is shaped by seasons: the Dry brings open roads and easier access; the Wet brings green abundance, storms, and selective closures that keep travel low-impact by necessity. We design trips here around patience and place—quiet boat time, early starts, and expert local guidance that respects both wildlife and cultural landscapes.
Great Barrier Reef
A Living Seascape
The Great Barrier Reef is a marine safari of light, current, and patience—where the most powerful moments often happen when you stop moving and start watching. It’s been World Heritage–listed since 1981 and spans an immense 348,000 km², which is part of why it can still feel spacious when you choose the right access points and pacing. We plan it as a low-impact encounter: expert naturalist guidance, careful wildlife etiquette, and a deep respect for a place that’s both breathtaking and vulnerable.
Uluru
A Sacred Monolith, A Living Story
Uluru isn’t a sight you “do”—it’s a place you meet with humility. Set within Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park, it’s a World Heritage landscape where natural beauty and Aṉangu cultural law are inseparable. The experience is quieter than people expect: slow walks, shifting light, and a deepened understanding of why respect—distance, stillness, listening—is the real privilege here.
The Outback
Silence, Stars, and Soil
The Australian Outback is less a single place than a vast interior defined by distance, low population, and largely intact landscapes. It’s “safari” in the original sense: reading tracks, light, weather, and animal behavior with patience—often at dawn, dusk, and under a night sky that feels almost impossibly big. The reward isn’t volume; it’s depth: a quieter relationship with land, and a stronger sense of what remoteness really means. And because conditions can be unforgiving, the best Outback journeys are the ones planned with care, conservative margins, and respect.
A journey isn’t complete without its defining moment.
Frequently Asked Questions About Australia
Where can I see Australia’s unique wildlife?
Kangaroo Island, Tasmania, and Kakadu offer some of the best wildlife encounters.
When is the best time to visit the Great Barrier Reef?
June–October has the clearest waters, ideal for diving and snorkeling.
What’s the best way to explore the Outback?
Self-drive road trips, guided 4WD tours, and luxury train journeys like The Ghan.
Can I see crocodiles in the wild?
Yes, Kakadu National Park and the Northern Territory are prime spots for saltwater crocodile sightings.
What’s the best place for whale watching in Australia?
Hervey Bay, Sydney, and the Great Australian Bight (June–November) are top spots for humpback whales.