Australia’s most isolated islands

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Norfolk Island

Norfolk Island

Do you want to get away from it all – and we mean, really get away from it all? When a regular beach holiday just won’t cut it, why not jet away to one of Australia’s most isolated islands and discover what their appeal is, apart from the distance.

Christmas Island

You don’t hear much about Christmas Island, apart from the detention centre located on the island. But over half of this small Australian territory around 2600km from Perth (it’s much closer to Indonesia than Australia) is national park, which protects what might, in other circumstances, be called an island paradise.

Rising out of the ocean – Christmas Island is the top of an underwater mountain – much of the surface is covered with tropical rainforest. The most famous residents of the island’s rainforest are the huge crabs. These crabs aren’t like the ones you see in tanks in Chinatown. Robber crabs, one of the prominent species on the island, can grow to be as big as rubbish bins. You don’t want to find yourself in the way when these crabs start their annual migration to the beaches for the mating season.

If crabs aren’t really your bowl of seafood chowder, then Christmas Island offers great snorkelling, diving and fishing. The seas around the island are treacherous, and most areas of the island greet the sea with 20m-high cliffs, but there’s a selection of beaches with natural coves where you can safely swim. Oh, and the best thing about swimming here? The island is ringed by a coral reef, so the snorkelling is just offshore.

Cocos Keeling Islands

Joining Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean, the Cocos Keeling Islands are like Australia’s version of the Maldives, a collection of small islands forming an atoll. And unlike Christmas Island, with its more controversial ties to immigration and mining, there’s nothing to mar your enjoyment of these islands. You can participate in all of the activities you’d expect at a tropical paradise – swimming, snorkelling, diving, windsurfing, bird-watching, island hopping – as well as some that are a bit more unexpected, like walking across the entire atoll at low tide on certain days.

Of the 27 islands that form that Cocos Keeling, only two are inhabited. Most people stay on West Island. From West Island, you can catch a ferry across to Home Island, home to the Cocos Malay people, where you try some spicy Malay food or check out the museum.

King Island

The island where dairy is king! King Island is famous for its cheeses, but there’s more to this island in the Bass Strait than its exports. Situated almost perfectly halfway between Tasmania and Victoria, King Island constantly braces itself against the Roaring Forties and has the shipwreck history to prove it. Luckily, the days of maritime disasters seem to be over, and you can take a self-guided shipwreck tour of the island. And if that doesn’t scare you off, there’s some world-class surfing spots you can try.

What else is there to do on the island? Well, apart from take in the incredible natural environment, buy some cheese and eat some beef, you should just … relax and embrace island life.

Macquarie Island

Macquarie Island

Macquarie Island

Just when you thought an Australian island couldn’t be more remote than the Cocos Keeling Islands, along comes Macquarie Island to burst that bubble. This Tasmanian State Reserve is halfway between the Australian mainland and Antarctica, around 1400km from Tasmania.

So here’s the good news: Macquarie Island is a truly unique natural environment (so unique it’s on the World Heritage List), with dramatic cliffs and mountains crafted from volcanic rock, and is home to king and emperor penguins, seals and a magnificent seabird population.

The bad news is that the only humans who get to visit Macquarie Island do so as part of Australia’s Antarctic program. But if we were you, we’d think about signing up.

Norfolk Island

From Australia itself, to Tasmania, to Cockatoo Island in Sydney – the early British inhabitants of Australia really liked using islands as prisons. And even though Norfolk Island was a difficult 1000km from the east coast of Australia, that didn’t stop the British from following their usual patterns and establishing Norfolk as a prison island, although the last prisoner was moved to Tasmania in 1855.

The remains of the prison on the island are now heritage listed, and the island has shaken off the rest of its penal past. It’s now a delightful holiday retreat, complete with a friendly community and a tropical island feel.

     

Top 5 summer beaches away from the crowds

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Lake Lascelles Hopetoun Victoria, Red Nomad Oz

Lake Lascelles Hopetoun Victoria, Red Nomad Oz

Love summer beaches in Australia, but hate the crowds? Red Nomad Oz shares her favourite secluded summer beach spots across Australia.

The simple Aussie formula ‘summer + hot = beach’ is virtually synonymous with being an Australian.

While our neighbours in the northern hemisphere dream of a white Christmas – and in some cases, actually get one – our white Christmas can be white sand and reflective white bodies bleached from the pallor of a sunless office life AND sometimes white heat!

But that doesn’t stop us going to the beach in droves. This means it’s sometimes hard to find an empty stretch of sand for your towel, and there’s only standing room in the surf.

SO what do you do if you LOVE the beach, but LOATHE the crowds?

WELL … go unplugged. Less crowded options do exist!

But where do you find them?

Right here in my handy guide – you’ll find five ways to enjoy summer beaches while keeping your elbow room, temper and personal space intact.

Ballina Sth Beach NSW, Red Nomad Oz

Ballina Sth Beach New South Wales, Red Nomad Oz

1. Not-spot beaches

Hot-spot beach destinations like Surfers and Byron Bay will always be crowded in summer. So try a ‘not-spot’ like nearby Ballina, just over 100 kilometres south of the Gold Coast in the beautiful New South Wales Northern Rivers area.

Yes, there WILL be other people around – but not nearly so many.

Skennars Beach has a bit of something for everyone. Surf, swimming, rocks, birdwatching, scenic views, and sometimes even the obligatory driftwood for beach photos!

Skennars Beach Ballina NSW, Red Nomad Oz

Skennars Beach Ballina New South Wales, Red Nomad Oz

And South Ballina Beach? It’s so long it’s difficult to see where it ends. And empty, empty, empty.

You can always drive the 37 kilometres to Byron for a people-fix – just don’t forget your prop. A surfboard, musical instrument or baby should do the trick …

2. Island beaches

Frankland Islands QLD, Red Nomad Oz

Frankland Islands Queensland, Red Nomad Oz

Is there anyone who doesn’t want to visit a tropical island? So the lazing-on-a-tropical-island-beach fantasy virtually guarantees they’ll all be crowded, right?

Well … NO! Not if you select an island with a cap on its visitor numbers!

The jewel in Australia’s tourism crown, Lord Howe Island, around 600 kilometres east of Port Macquarie on the New South Wales coast, limits tourist numbers to 400 at any given time – even during peak holiday periods! That makes finding your own stretch of almost-deserted beach is almost as easy as shooting fish in a barrel …

Lord Howe Island NSW, Red Nomad Oz

Lord Howe Island New South Wales, Red Nomad Oz

Or tiny Troubridge Island, just visible 8 kilometres off-shore from Edithburgh, on South Australia’s Yorke Peninsula. Book the ex-lighthouse-keeper cottage – it sleeps up to 12 – and have the whole island to yourself.

Further north, only one tour company provides day tours to the Frankland Islands in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park via Deeral, so who’s on the boat is all there is! Take a short walk to the other side of Normanby Island from the landing area for a beach to yourself.

3. Inland beaches

Copi Hollow Menindee Lakes NSW, Red Nomad Oz

Copi Hollow Menindee Lakes New South Wales, Red Nomad Oz

Who said a beach holiday had to be on the coast? Be creative. If you’re just after sun, sand and water, try heading inland to a river or lake for a ‘beach’ break away from coastal crowds.

While the water level of many inland waterways fluctuates according to the current stage of the Aussie drought/flood cycle, a deserted river bend somewhere along the Murray River’s 2500 kilometre length, or an inland lake like Lake Lascelles in Victoria’s Hopetoun or the New South Wales Menindee Lakes system, can be a potential paradise!

For an added bonus, Murray River town Mildura claims the only inland Surf Life Saving club in the Southern Hemisphere!

If you’re a thrillseeker, join in Lake Argyle‘s 10 or 20 kilometre annual swim– but be prepared to fight off the freshwater crocs for a sandy sunbathing spot!!

4. Northern beaches

Coconut Wells Beach via Broome Western Australia

Coconut Wells Beach via Broome, Western Australia, Red Nomad Oz

Australia’s far north isn’t an obvious choice for a summer beach because the formula changes to Summer + Humid + Hot = Wet Season! But it doesn’t rain 24/7, and there can be lower priced fares or package deals available.

Just check the cyclone warnings before you go!

Alternatively, save the north for a winter break – many beaches are still less populated (read: kind of empty) even during the peak tourist season from June–September.

If Darwin’s Mindil Beach is too crowded, catch the ferry from Cullen Bay Marina to tropical paradise Mandorah. If the heat, humidity or rain is too much, head for the Mandorah Beach Hotel Bar right on the beachfront and see if you can find another way to cool down.

Mandorah via Darwin Northern Territory, Red Nomad Oz

Further west, head away from Broome’s world-famous Cable Beach, and popular Town Beach up the coast to Coconut Wells. This Kimberley hideout has all the hallmarks of paradise with endless sand, clear water, and a blue, blue sky – even during the peak tourist season.

Or take your camera to Wangetti Beach, on the north-east coast below a popular hang-gliding spot between Cairns and Port Douglas for killer holiday snaps. If there’s anyone else on the beach, it’ll be easy to edit them out!!

5. Mystery beaches

It’s a mystery why some great beaches are deserted – but who cares if it’s distance, accommodation or they’re too big to fill up easily. Just hunt them down, appreciate them – then try to keep them secret so they STAY deserted!

Some of the beaches on South Australia’s Yorke Peninsula are virtually deserted all year round – even in peak holiday times! A 2–3 hour drive from Adelaide, the peninsula is a very popular holiday spot – but its farthest flung beaches remain relatively crowd-free.

On a good day, West Cape or Browns Beach in Innes National Park are unparalleled.

And … that’s where you’ll probably find me!

Of course, it’s possible to have a great seaside holiday on a crowded coastal beach. But for a great summer escape, leave the droves behind and go for the unplugged option!

And celebrate an Aussie White Christmas at the beach!

For more great Aussie travel ideas and experiences, visit Amazing Australian Adventures and let Red show you around the REAL Australia.

Thanks Red! What are your favourite summer beaches?