Six Weeks to See Australia: Can it be Done?

I had a crazy, hectic six weeks in Australia. After working my second summer at camp in America I decided it was time to relax with the kangaroos in the outback and the fit surfer dudes on Bondi, and travel around the country to see the friends I’d made at camp. I didn’t actually realise how big Australia was though when I planned my whistlestop tour of the biggest country on earth. Here’s how I saw Australia in six weeks, and some hot tips for anyone else thinking about cramming it in…

Can You see Australia in six weeks?

The route

Sydney – Bondi – Melbourne – Adelaide – Katherine – Darwin – Cairns – Brisbane – Sunshine Coast

Highlights: My tour from Darwin to Cairns and going on my Brisbanian friends’ Australian holidays to the Sunshine Coast.

Lowlights: Being by myself and realising Australia is not actually scorching year round like Home and Away makes it out to be.

Sydney and Bondi

It was cold! I went in September and was determined to lie on the beach. This unnecessary determination led to tonsillitis and an ear infection by the time I got to Melbourne. But apart from that, I loved Bondi Beach and actually had a go at surfing – never knew it was so easy!

I stayed with my friend in Bondi who showed me around the area, King’s Cross and took me to the Ice Bar on Sydney Harbour,  on a speed boat across the river and to see the high rises of the CBD. We also hired bikes in the park and had a great time whizzing around.

One of my favourite things about Sydney and Bondi was the incredible food and the tasty smoothie shacks that you could find everywhere. You couldn’t tear me away.

Six weeks in Australia

Listen to my podcast

I chat with Jayne from Girl Tweets World all about the best spots to visit in Australia, and her top advice for what to do and see while you’re there.

Have a listen!

Check out the rest of the episodes in the So She Travels series here.


Melbourne

I felt so lonely in Melbourne. I was ill (see above), staying in a skanky hostel with crappy bunk beds and it was cold and raining. All I did was the Neighbours tour where I got to meet…. just been Googling for 20 minutes and I can’t find him. Someone rubbish.  It was cool seeing the school though and Ramsay Street.

I also went on the local tram and to the coolest cinema I’ve ever been to. It had bean bags for seats so I promptly fell asleep to the completely non soothing film of United 93. It was just so comfy and warm compared to my hostel.

I decided to get out of there ASAP.

Adelaide

When I tell Australians I’ve been to the Royal Adelaide Show, they laugh at me. It was honestly one of my favourite Australia experiences though and I was only in Adelaide for the day, not even the night, but it is one of my strongest memories. I was waiting for the dreaded Ghan train to…

Canoeing up the river in Australia

READ MORE: The Best Souvenirs from Australia

Cairns lido
Exploring the Gold Coast in Australia

Alice Springs

If anyone tells you the Ghan Train is an incredible experience, don’t listen to them. It’s one of my biggest life regrets. I was stuck on that train in a crappy cheap seat for three days and two nights by myself. The only thing to see out the window was desert, desert and more desert. I signed up thinking I’d get to see Ayer’s Rock, but it doesn’t even go close. I travelled 2,979 kilometres  from Adelaide to Darwin with just a few hours break in Alice Springs to keep me sane.

Darwin

Darwin was definitely my highlight of Australia. It was so cheap and scenic and had some great night markets to wander around. I met some cool people in the hostel here – woke up on a sun lounger after one night’s hard partying – and really enjoyed the more relaxed hippyesque vibe. I chilled out in the day and wandered around the museums and galleries by day admiring the work from the local artists.

I joined a tour from here across the Northern Territory for five nights to Cairns. The loneliness I’d felt travelling by myself lifted as I was on a tour with four other people, two Irish girls, a German girl and a Swiss guy. We travelled in a reinforced bus and met some fascinating Australians who’d lived in the outback all their lives as we went through the homesteads and bars. We got to experience the real outback Australia and when we arrived in Croydon half way through the trip we found there was a country music festival on, which was brilliant fun. I also washed my hair in the waterfall used in the Herbal Essences advert, which was fun.

I had some eye-opening late night chats with the driver and tour leader of the bus, who has actually shaped my outlook on life more than he could ever know. He has been a great inspiration to me ever since.

Cairns

It didn’t feel long before we arrived in Cairns and we went out that night to the famous Woolshed party bar. Things got messy and I found out that my new friends were actually quite odd – as I’d come to suspect. One of them ended up in a fight with another and marched off home. When I tried to walk her because she was a little Irish girl who’d never been away from home before, she hit me. Yes, hit me. I walked behind her anyway for my own conscience and the next morning gathered up my stuff to find a new hostel. After phoning my dad and getting a hot tip that an old school friend was in the area I phoned her and ended up having a brilliant week in Cairns just hanging out with her eating, drinking, scuba diving, sunbathing around this pool and doing Tai Chi.

Brisbane

I met with my friend and stayed with her family just outside Brisbane. She was working so I went into Brisbane and saw the sites – again, i felt quite lonely. Her house was amazing though and her parents drove us to Australia Zoo, where I held a koala and had my photo taken with a kangaroo.

Gold Coast

The me and her went on holiday to the Gold Coast with two of her friends – it’s the equivalent of England’s Newquay. All we did was drink, party, lie on the beach and shop in our team of four. It was great fun. Then it was back to Bondi for a few days to see another friend and then off I went to catch a flight to NYC, and home again.

Accommodation

I stayed in hostels and on friend’s floors all the way round. I found that people would initially be really friendly, but as soon as they found out I was staying for just a few days they lost interest. Travellers who go to Australia are usually in it for the long haul.

Recommendations

It’s hard to cover the 7,686,850sq km in such a short time, but my 5 hot tips if you’ve only got six weeks to see Australia are:

1. Don’t try to see as much as I did; choose a few places to enjoy for longer.

2. Don’t take the Ghan train – fly or join a tour group instead.

3. Make sure you visit Darwin.

4. Try and fit in Perth, you could fly into Sydney and out of Perth to make this easier.

5. Go with friends to make the travelling part more fun.

Recommendations from other bloggers

– Check out Natasha von Geldern’s Australia Guide over on WorldWanderingKiwi.com. She can give you more background on the history and geography of Australia to help you plan your trip.

More on Australia

https://vickyflipfloptravels.com/the-ghan-australia/

https://vickyflipfloptravels.com/animals-at-australia-zoo/

9 Comments

  1. Vicky!
    I can’t believe you missed out Perth.
    And the Sydney Harbour Bridge Climb.
    (I read your other article where you confessed being a wuss when it comes to heights)
    Anyway, I hope you get to make a trip back to Australia very soon. And this time for a longer haul with a larger group of friends.
    Since I stay in Perth, there are a few recommendations I would like to make.
    Also, yeah the Ghan train can turn out to be quite a pain sometimes. opting for a car hire is a better idea.

    If you like white-sand beaches, parasailing and other water-sports then Cable Beach and Broome should be on the top of your list. If you’re fascinated by aquatic life and like diving, then Shark Bay (a World Heritage Site) is the place to be. You may want to travel south to the Perth Zoo or north to the Aquarium of Western Australia (formerly Underwater World). Take time to visit the port of Fremantle which is practically a Perth suburb, and drop by the Maritime Museum, or travel much farther north to Money Mia, wade out to sea and cavort with the dolphins. There’s also something called the Perth Walking Tour.

    Hope this keeps you excited to be back here 😀
    I am also sharing some threads which might be helpful.

    Keep travelling, mate!

    http://www.hostelworld.com/hostels/Perth/Australia

    http://www.hertz.com.au/

    http://showmeperth.com.au/

    1. I know! I hear Perth is amazing, but I just didn’t have time to make it all the way over there. One day I hope I’ll make it back…

  2. hi Vicky,
    Im sorry you didn’t like melbourne – thats my old neck of the woods – so lm sorry it didn’t treat you well. Next time drop me a line and l’ll find you a better and more comfy bed to stay in instead of the cappy hostel.
    But lm glad you liked the rest of Oz – its pretty neat, even if lm biased!
    take care,
    Anthea

  3. It’s really awesome feeling when I saw the sunset picture. Love it so much and you know what it’s my dream to visit all Australia’s famous places but I couldn’t manage it from my busy scheduled. hoping that lucky day will come soon for sure.

  4. If you had to narrow it down to 2 or 2.5 weeks, which highlights would you recommend? I ask because I’ll never have the opportunity to spend more time than that, but have always dreamt of a holiday in Australia (thinking about it next year). Obviously Darwin, which looks great, but which other 2 or 3 spots would you rank highest?

    1. Seeing Sydney Opera House was pretty epic, but I didn’t rate the city that highly. Cairns was definitely fun and there was lots to do there. So yeah, I’d fly into Sydney (and you can see Bondi easily too) then go up to Cairns and out of Darwin. That would make for a nice little trip actually 🙂

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