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Northern Territory Encompassed Southbound

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From$3,325$3,125
January 18, 2025

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Duration: 9 Days/ 8 Nights
Availability : Requested
Departure Location: Darwin, Australia
Destination Location: Northern Terriory, Australia
Min Age : 8+
Max People : 24
Tour Details

Duration:9 Days/8Nights
Availability : Requested
Departure Location: Darwin, Australia
Destination Location: Northern Terriory, Australia
Min Age : 8
Max People : 24

Hike through swathes of monsoon rainforest and woodland in Litchfield, cooling off with dips in rock holes and waterfalls; search for crocs by boat in the Mary River Wetlands; learn about the ways of Kakadu’s original inhabitants during a cultural interpretive walk; visit the historic gold-mining town of Pine Creek and drift through the Katherine River by boat or canoe.

Day 01 – Darwin to Mary River, via Litchfield National Park

Day 02 – Kakadu National Park: Ubirr & Barrmundi Gorge

Day 03 – Kakadu to Katherine

Day 04 – Katherine Gorge to Darwin

Day 05 – Flight Travel Day Darwin to Alice Springs

Day 06 – Alice Springs to Uluru (Ayer Rock)

Day 07 – Uluru Sunrise

Day 08 – Kings Canyon rim walk

Day 09 – The Western MacDonnell Rangers

Inclusions

Litchfield National Park
Mary River cruise
Kakadu National Park Fee
Maguk (Barramundi Gorge)
Ubirr Rock
Top Didj Indigenous Experience
Uluru sunset drinks
1000 Star Dinner
Uluru & Kata Tjuta National Park Fee
Uluru Cultural Centre
Mala cultural interpretative walk
Uluru Base Walk
Kings Canyon Rim Walk

Exclusions

Itinerary

Day 1Darwin to Mary River, via Litchfield National Park (L/D)

Flush with waterfalls, swimming holes and some pretty gigantic termite mounds, Litchfield National Park encapsulates all that’s wonderful about the Top End. We’ll start off here checking out Florence Falls and the Buley Rockholes, then break for a picnic before travelling on to Wangi Falls for a final swim and leisurely stroll through monsoon forest. Leaving Litchfield, it’s on and into Mary River National Park. The species of saltwater crocodile found in Australia are the biggest in the world, and the Mary River wetlands are absolutely full of them. See how many you can spot on an afternoon river cruise. All tents are twin-share and come with a proper bed.

Day 2Kakadu National Park: Ubirr & Barrmundi Gorge (B/L/D)

In giving Kakadu National Park World Heritage-listing, UNESCO described it as a ‘living cultural landscape with exceptional natural and cultural values’. Indigenous people have lived here for more than 50,000 years, to which the ancient rock paintings of Ubirr can attest. Your guide will explain the significance of these artworks during an interpretative cultural walk that finishes on a rocky escarpment overlooking the Nardab floodplain. In the afternoon we head to either Maguk (Barramundi Gorge) or Gunlom Falls (seasonal choice). Swimming spots don’t get a whole lot more inviting than either of these spectacular sites.

Day 3Kakadu to Katherine (B/L/D)

Given that Kakadu covers approximately the same amount of land as Slovenia, the sky’s a pretty good place to see it all from. This morning you’ll have the option of taking a scenic flight over the billabongs, bushlands and floodplains that make up this ruggedly beautiful region. After a stop in at the Bowali visitors centre we head for the historic gold-mining town of Pine Creek which offers a very different side to Australian history. Back on the road again, there’s time for a dip in Edith Falls before pulling into our private campsite near Nitmuluk National Park.

Day 4Katherine Gorge to Darwin (B/L)

Back in the day (ok, it was 23 million years ago), the Katherine River flowed all the way from Arnhem Land to the Timor Sea. These days, the waters have subsided significantly: the Katherine River now flows along hemmed in on both sides by cliffs 70 metres high. It’s the highlight attraction of Nitmiluk National Park though, and you’ll have the opportunity to cruise through it by canoe or boat. Following lunch, we visit a private property next to an indigenous art gallery for some coaching in the ancient arts of boomerang throwing, fire making and traditional painting. Then it’s back to Darwin to check into your Motel for the night.

Day 5Flight Travel Day Darwin to Alice Springs

Today, skip the 1,500km of driving which is about 24 hours by road, and fly from Darwin to Alice Springs with Qantas Airways. Qantas was Australia’s first commercial airline, and stands for “Queensland and Northern Territory Ariel Services” and is now one of the worlds best International airlines.

We’ll arrange your air tickets and issue them a couple of weeks prior to your departure. On arrival in Alice Springs, someone will be waiting to transfer you to your hotel. Tonight, you’ll be staying at the Alice Motor Inn. (no meals included)

Day 6Alice Springs to Uluru (Ayer Rock) (L/D)

Melbourne might have the arts scene and Sydney the beaches, but Alice Springs is really where you need to go to understand Australia proper. Approximately 70% of the Australian continent is classed as arid or semi-arid – and little old Alice Springs sits right in the middle of it all.
This morning we’ll pick you up out the front of the Alice Motor Inn at 6:10am. First stop for the day is a working outback camel farm, where you’ll have the chance to lope through the outback on a ‘ship of the desert’. Whereas Uluru emerges from the earth as one giant boulder form, Kata Tjuta pops up as 36 different domes – you’ll get to know the site pretty well on an afternoon hike following lunch. Enjoy a glass of champagne as you watch the Rock’s colours change as the sun sets behind it, throwing magnificent colours into the sky. Then, as evening begins, it’s time to tuck into our famous 1,000 Star Dinner: an outdoor candlelit feast of delicious food and wines. 

Day 7Uluru Sunrise (B/L/D)

It’s an early rise today but seeing Australia is what you came for, right? After watching a fiery outback sun rear up over the world’s biggest rock get a real sense of the rock’s scale on an unguided walk around its base. Then learn about the cultural significance of this iconic landform on a cultural interpretative walk with an indigenous guide. In their creatin time stories, the Anangu’s ancestral beings the Mala settled here after being chased to the region by an evil dog-like creature called kurpany. The on-site Cultural Centre also houses an extensive collection of indigenous arts and crafts for you to browse. Tonight we spend the night in an exclusive campsite in Watarrka National Park. 

Day 8Kings Canyon rim walk (B/L/D)

The centrepiece attraction of Watarrka is undoubtedly Kings Canyon; a humungous gorge enclosed by sheer rock walls hundreds of metres high. Offering a welcome escape from the dry desert heat, this site’s deep gullies and hidden rockpools provide shelter to more than 600 species of native plants and animals. Your guide will point these out on a guided trek that takes in the canyon’s most famous sites – the Lost City, Garden of Eden, Amphitheatre and North and South Walls. Then it’s lunch, rest, Then it’s lunch, rest, and off we head toward Glen Helen where we camp this evening.

Day 9The Western MacDonnell Rangers (B/L)

This morning, we will pick you up from your hotel at 7:00am and journey watch the Australian wilds waking up on a morning drive out to the West MacDonnell Ranges. Reaching this national park, we’ll follow the Waterhole trail through Ormiston Pound to Ormiston Gorge – a tranquil little rock pool surrounded by ochre-coloured rock walls and white-trunked eucalypts. Black-footed rock wallabies often pop down here for a drink, so keep those peepers peeled. Next up is Ellery Creek, where there’s the chance to cool off with a dip. Following lunch, it’s on to Simpsons Gap. Known as Rungutjirpa to the Arrernte people, this deep gorge, often partly filled with water, is associated with goanna, eagle and rock wallaby dreamings. See the colours of the ranges change as the sun starts its descent, perhaps from atop a camel during an optional sunset ride.

The total driving time will be about three hours, and you will walk up to 10km.

Optional Activities

Sunset Camel Ride (Child) – AUD40
Sunset Camel Ride (Adult) – AUD70

Map
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