Australia's newest four-day hike traces an ancient, stunning route
One of the best things about this walk is we're doing it pack-free, carrying only day packs and arriving at camp each afternoon to find everything set up for us: our roomy tents (each large enough to stand up in and containing two comfy camp beds, sleeping bags and real pillows), a shower tent, the camp kitchen and an undercover dining area full of snacks, treats and gourmet meals.
Vision Walks' CEO Wendy Bithell is passionate about supporting local suppliers, so almost everything we eat and drink comes from the Northern Rivers, including Brookfarm muesli, Stone & Wood beers, Jilly wines, Nimbin Valley cheeses and chocolates from Love Byron Bay, all lovingly prepared by local caterer the Bloody Good Food Co.
That night, rain drums on the roof above our table as we dine in a bubble of light from solar lanterns, feeling like the only people on Earth. There's no mobile reception, no Wi-Fi, no one else around; in four days we see only one young couple and an older group of three, all carrying big packs.
Each day we walk for five or six hours – except on day two, which is an eight-hour, 18-kilometre epic. After climbing what feels like a thousand stone steps that morning, we reach the rim of the caldera, 800 metres above sea level. The rain is relentless, ditto the mud and the leeches (though they're mercifully small). At the five lookouts we pass, mist teases us with fragments of views – Wollumbin! The sea! I love the unexpected adventure of it all.
I also love the hour of silent walking we do each morning, each of us falling into single file behind Skye, tuning in to bird calls, small details beside the track – like a tiny forest of mushrooms on a mossy log – and the simple, timeless act of moving through this landscape on foot.
At other times, Skye points out how the Minjungbal people (and the Widjabul Wia-bal, when we enter their Country) use particular plants, the rainforest their pantry, medicine cabinet and shed all in one. (On future trips, a Bundjalung guide will meet the group one afternoon to offer an Indigenous perspective on the walk.)
After a gentle descent on day three, we arrive at a spectacular lookout and the sun makes a guest appearance, spotlighting three gushing waterfalls on the far side of Wanganui Gorge. A few minutes later we arrive at our final campsite, where our dining table has the same view and our tents are dwarfed by tall eucalypts – blackbutt, bloodwoods and stringybarks.
We hear the official end-point of the Gidjuum Gulganyi before we see it. Living in northern NSW, I know Minyon Falls well, but arriving on foot really dials up the glory. For most walkers, the viewing deck at the top is their finish line, but Vision Walks adds an extra six kilometres to include the trek to the base of the falls.
It's the most difficult section of the entire walk, with a tricky creek crossing and a scramble over slippery boulders, but standing at the base of the thundering falls drenched in spray is exhilarating – and gives us a visceral sense of this landscape and all the water running through it.
On our way back to Byron Bay in the shuttle, I ask Skye Weatherstone for her thoughts on the walk, since it was her first time doing it too.
'I thought about the old people a lot,' she says, 'how so many of the local elders are too old or unwell now to come up here any more and that the forest would have reclaimed these trails without the Gidjuum Gulganyi. It's bringing these trails back to life, and the forest gets to have humans in it again, people who can appreciate its beauty and hopefully act as caretakers into the future.'
The details
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Where
The Gidjuum Gulganyi Walk starts at Unicorn Falls in Mount Jerusalem National Park near Uki in northern NSW and ends at Minyon Falls in Nightcap National Park, 45 minutes' drive from Byron Bay.
Walk
Vision Walks' guided pack-free glamping experience includes chef-prepared meals and drinks, bento-box lunches, snacks, transfers, camping gear and expert local guides, from $3200 a person. See visionwalks.com.au
Connect Adventures is the other operator licensed to run guided walks on this track and offers pack-free walks from $2165 a person and full-pack walks from $1855 a person. See connectadventures.com.au
The self-guided option, carrying your own food and camping gear, costs $173 for one or two people, for the three nights. Each public campsite has five hardwood tent platforms, a sheltered table, rainwater tanks and a composting toilet. See nationalparks.nsw.gov.au
Drive
All hikers must walk from north to south so you'll need to arrange transport at either end. Transfers are included in guided walks; Vision Walks also provides transfers for self-guided hikers for $38 from Mullumbimby, $61 from Byron Bay, $121 from Ballina Airport and $138 from Gold Coast Airport. See visionwalks.com.au
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West Australian
5 hours ago
- West Australian
Uluru with friends
It feels like just me and 102 close friends at Uluru. Considering we only flew yesterday from Perth direct to Yulara, the airport for Uluru, in under two hours, that's remarkable to me. But then, we are drawn together by our love of the world, and Australia in particular, and by this peculiar adventure. We have partnered with our trusted friends, Holidays of Australia and the World, to charter a National Jet Express Embraer 190 aircraft. Happily, that meant checking in and boarding at NJE's base on the edge of the Perth domestic airport, rather than going through the airport itself. NJE's staff are professional, cheery and helpful. And off we go, with two in the cockpit, three cabin crew and two technical staff — all of who will stay (along with the aircraft) for the four days and three nights we are at Uluru. We fly over this broad landscape of inland WA, with the dot paintings of salt lakes below in the Wheatbelt, Goldfields and Great Victoria Desert — and the earth seeming to redden as we head east. We cross the border quite near Surveyor Generals Corner — the spot where WA, South Australia and the Northern Territory meet. A fly-around has been requested and approved, and the E190 does a figure of eight, so that we see both Kata Tjuta and Uluru from the air. It's a nice little taster. A scene-setter. We land and are straight into AAT Kings buses, with our bags loaded directly onto the coaches and then taken to our rooms at Sails in the Desert. Yulara township, run by Voyages, an Indigenous company, has a range of hotels and accommodation, and Sails in the Desert is the five-star top offering. The rooms are spacious and fully serviced. The central garden and pool area is haunted by ghost gums. It's a comfortable base for our adventure. And that adventure begins at 7.50pm on that first evening, after an early dinner, when we board buses again to drive in the dark to see Field of Light — the 50,000 spindles of light installed by artist Bruce Munro (with help, of course). The lights emphasise the curves of the landscape and change through a spectrum of ochre, deep violet, blue and soft white. It's a chance to take pictures, too, of course. Turn the flash off and hold the phone camera still. Light your friends with another phone torch … and hold the phone camera still. I sleep well in one of my two queen-sized beds, rise early, pick up my boxed breakfast — and the adventure takes a step up when I step onto an AAT Kings coach again at 6.15am. Day two, and I feel very much at home in the red dirt. Throughout the short trip we are fortunate with weather — with temperatures rising into the early 20 degrees under a blue sky during the day and cool evenings. But this morning, as we are driving to a sunrise viewing spot to see the sky turn through dramatic pastel hues and early rays of sun hit the big red body of Uluru, it is cold. I have a few layers on but rather envy the gloves one of my companions is wearing. The cluster of new friends up on the timber platform can see the sun one side and Uluru the other, and I can hear them chatting happily in low voices. But, after joining them, I also walk down onto a lower path to see Uluru sitting where I like it, in this semi arid landscape of red earth and spinifex. In some pictures, I like to focus on this foreground, and have the big arkose sandstone lump just slightly out of focus in the background. To have the foreground in focus, I touch and hold my phone camera's screen in the spot the spinifex is. We then drive on around Uluru, stopping to walk into Mutitjulu Waterhole, all with the excellent narrative of our AAT Kings guide. The guides train through Charles Darwin University, which has a short course called Uluru-Kata Tjuta Knowledge for Tour Guides. It gives tour guides essential information about Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park and since 2011, all guides leading tours in the park have had to successfully complete the course. It was developed by park staff, Anangu traditional owners and the tourism industry. Delivered at Yulara, the township at Uluru, it is studied part-time over six months. Students have to reach a required competency level, which helps to give a consistent message and information. After completing our lap of Uluru, we are driven on to Kata Tjuta, to walk up Walpa Gorge. The morning is sunny but not hot. The sky is a strong blue. The lit side of the gorge is red, the side in shade has a more muted mood. But these two giant conglomerate-rock walls create a massive V, with the sky beyond. We are back at Sails in the Desert at 1pm, with everyone full of experience and the stories, I'm sure. With Margot Vine, from Holidays of Australia's home in Adelaide, and Ann Hope as hosts, everyone spends the rest of the day in their own way. I see some chatting in the lounge bar, some sitting out in the warm sun, others looking round the artworks that local Indigenous artists have for sale on the grass near the Town Square, and another reading in a quiet spot. The trip has been structured like this — with time for personal adventures or reflection. Whatever our guests' style is. Next morning, some take off early for the Uluru Base Walk, others work their way through the many free attractions at Yulara, which include a guided walk and explanations in the gardens, and a bush tucker walk. Some listen to a didgeridoo, and learn a little about how it is played. Others are shown through the Gallery of Central Australia. But, come the evening, most are back together at 5pm to leave for the Sound of Silence Dinner. We are driven in coaches to a short walk up to a lookout platform, for drinks as the sun sets, with a good view of Uluru. There is more live didgeridoo playing, and then we walk down to round tables with white tablecloths, fully set on the red earth of the Red Centre. What a sight. Soup, a barbecue buffet (with kangaroo and barramundi for those who chose it) and desserts fill us in the cooling night. Some enjoy the warmth and flames of the fire pit. And then an astronomer comes to point out stars, planets and constellations, in an extended moment that would surely make anyone feel small. We so easily fall into believing we're the centre of the universe, rather than just one being living on a rock that is but one grain of sand in it. On Sunday morning, in the garden of Sails in the Desert, some of us meet to talk phone photography, and learn more about 'the camera in our pocket'. 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Look through all they have to offer at and call 1300 854 897. + Without our charter flight, options for getting to Uluru include flying via Darwin, Melbourne or Alice Springs, which then means a 445km drive to Yulara (from Alice Springs).

ABC News
4 days ago
- ABC News
Indigenous tourism puts outback Queensland skies on global stage
There is a part of the world where sprawling red plains neighbour waterfalls surrounded by lush, green bushland and morning glory clouds sweep across a seemingly infinite sky. Tucked away in the Gulf of Carpentaria there are many drawcards for tourists across the globe. But the region, which takes in the community of Burketown, has been rocked in recent years by back-to-back flooding events and COVID-19 isolation wreaking havoc on its tourism industry. Now, an Indigenous-owned business operated by the Gangalidda and Garawa people is working to break through the adversity and make their home a must visit destination again. Lurick Sowden manages Yagurli Tours, one of the first entirely Indigenous-run tourism businesses in the Gulf. While top tourist rankings are subjective, Mr Sowden said visiting global pilots equate Burketown to one of the most scenic hot air balloon destinations in the world after Switzerland and Japan. "We take them out onto Australia's largest aggregate of salt pan, which everyone drives past. They might not even know it's here," he said. "It's very, very special." It has not been all clear blue skies for the tourism operation. Mr Sowden said there had been "two standard years" since the business opened in 2016. The rest were littered with struggle. In early 2023 the Gulf endured its largest flood in a decade, isolating the region for more than three months before ex-tropical cyclone Kirrily barrelled through less than 12 months later with further flooding. "At the moment the roads are all open, Burketown is accessible," Mr Sowden said. Outback Queensland is a road-heavy tourist area — rail lines are virtually non-existent, and expensive flights are few and far between. As the regions rely on visiting grey nomads and caravan travellers alike, having accessible and open roads is key for tourism to flourish. "We're kind of back on track for just a normal year. Everything's kind of settled down and we're ready to go," Mr Sowden said. With almost 100 more visitors than last year, Mr Sowden hopes 2025 is the year things are turned around. "We should be in for a big year and a lot more people travelling around," he said. It is not just this pocket of Queensland feeling the pinch. Outback Queensland Tourism Association (OQTA) chief executive Denise Brown said the domestic tourist season had been slow off the mark across the state in 2025, with regional and rural regions bearing the brunt. In the OQTA's most recent annual report, operators reported the slowest start to the tourism season in four years with numbers down by 20 to 30 per cent compared to 2023. But it is not all doom and gloom. While recent devastating western Queensland floods stopped travellers heading north in their tracks, roads have begun to reopen. In tandem, visitor numbers across May and June have picked up. "Certainly, our challenges are always to have access, and our number one access is roads," Ms Brown said. Ms Brown said OQTA was working alongside tourism advocates and governments to show the country why they should trek to the outback. "The areas that we're focusing on is the colours of the beautiful landscapes, the green rolling carpet and the bird life," she said. While weather events might have washed away some of the country, Ms Brown said outback residents were as resilient as the landscapes and wanted to showcase their part of the world. "Indigenous tourism is really important to the whole of Queensland and that's certainly a pillar," she said. "Out of disaster comes amazing opportunities, the rebirthing of nature. "That is the opportunity to see the outback as you'll never see in the next 10 years."

The Age
4 days ago
- The Age
Australia's newest four-day hike traces an ancient, stunning route
One of the best things about this walk is we're doing it pack-free, carrying only day packs and arriving at camp each afternoon to find everything set up for us: our roomy tents (each large enough to stand up in and containing two comfy camp beds, sleeping bags and real pillows), a shower tent, the camp kitchen and an undercover dining area full of snacks, treats and gourmet meals. Vision Walks' CEO Wendy Bithell is passionate about supporting local suppliers, so almost everything we eat and drink comes from the Northern Rivers, including Brookfarm muesli, Stone & Wood beers, Jilly wines, Nimbin Valley cheeses and chocolates from Love Byron Bay, all lovingly prepared by local caterer the Bloody Good Food Co. That night, rain drums on the roof above our table as we dine in a bubble of light from solar lanterns, feeling like the only people on Earth. There's no mobile reception, no Wi-Fi, no one else around; in four days we see only one young couple and an older group of three, all carrying big packs. Each day we walk for five or six hours – except on day two, which is an eight-hour, 18-kilometre epic. After climbing what feels like a thousand stone steps that morning, we reach the rim of the caldera, 800 metres above sea level. The rain is relentless, ditto the mud and the leeches (though they're mercifully small). At the five lookouts we pass, mist teases us with fragments of views – Wollumbin! The sea! I love the unexpected adventure of it all. I also love the hour of silent walking we do each morning, each of us falling into single file behind Skye, tuning in to bird calls, small details beside the track – like a tiny forest of mushrooms on a mossy log – and the simple, timeless act of moving through this landscape on foot. At other times, Skye points out how the Minjungbal people (and the Widjabul Wia-bal, when we enter their Country) use particular plants, the rainforest their pantry, medicine cabinet and shed all in one. (On future trips, a Bundjalung guide will meet the group one afternoon to offer an Indigenous perspective on the walk.) After a gentle descent on day three, we arrive at a spectacular lookout and the sun makes a guest appearance, spotlighting three gushing waterfalls on the far side of Wanganui Gorge. A few minutes later we arrive at our final campsite, where our dining table has the same view and our tents are dwarfed by tall eucalypts – blackbutt, bloodwoods and stringybarks. We hear the official end-point of the Gidjuum Gulganyi before we see it. Living in northern NSW, I know Minyon Falls well, but arriving on foot really dials up the glory. For most walkers, the viewing deck at the top is their finish line, but Vision Walks adds an extra six kilometres to include the trek to the base of the falls. It's the most difficult section of the entire walk, with a tricky creek crossing and a scramble over slippery boulders, but standing at the base of the thundering falls drenched in spray is exhilarating – and gives us a visceral sense of this landscape and all the water running through it. On our way back to Byron Bay in the shuttle, I ask Skye Weatherstone for her thoughts on the walk, since it was her first time doing it too. 'I thought about the old people a lot,' she says, 'how so many of the local elders are too old or unwell now to come up here any more and that the forest would have reclaimed these trails without the Gidjuum Gulganyi. It's bringing these trails back to life, and the forest gets to have humans in it again, people who can appreciate its beauty and hopefully act as caretakers into the future.' The details Loading Where The Gidjuum Gulganyi Walk starts at Unicorn Falls in Mount Jerusalem National Park near Uki in northern NSW and ends at Minyon Falls in Nightcap National Park, 45 minutes' drive from Byron Bay. Walk Vision Walks' guided pack-free glamping experience includes chef-prepared meals and drinks, bento-box lunches, snacks, transfers, camping gear and expert local guides, from $3200 a person. See Connect Adventures is the other operator licensed to run guided walks on this track and offers pack-free walks from $2165 a person and full-pack walks from $1855 a person. See The self-guided option, carrying your own food and camping gear, costs $173 for one or two people, for the three nights. Each public campsite has five hardwood tent platforms, a sheltered table, rainwater tanks and a composting toilet. See Drive All hikers must walk from north to south so you'll need to arrange transport at either end. Transfers are included in guided walks; Vision Walks also provides transfers for self-guided hikers for $38 from Mullumbimby, $61 from Byron Bay, $121 from Ballina Airport and $138 from Gold Coast Airport. See