By KATE HUNTER
I’m lucky.
For all sorts of reasons, I’ve been travelling a bit over the last 2 years. With kids, without kids, with husb, with sisters and girlfriends, and solo. Sometimes I’ve travelled as a guest but mostly it’s been on our own dime.
I’ve done a family driving holiday through four Aussie states, lived it up in New York City, flopped on a Vanuatu beach, walked New Zealand’s Milford track, bumbled down the Victorian ski slopes and camped beside Queensland creeks.
It’s made me think a lot about how we choose where we travel and why.
Money’s a major deciding factor, together with time. Overseas travel has never been more popular thanks to a (still) strong Australian dollar and international airfares cheaper than a Sydney ferry ride. But I always feel kind of guilty when I choose to head offshore when there’s so much of Australia I haven’t seen.
I feel bad (not bad enough to not go) when I lap up the service provided by people I know are on a tiny wage. I know I should spend my dollars here and that our beaches are fab and our cities sparkle but why, when we have the choice, do so many Australians head offshore at the first opportunity?
And why is it so hard to sell Australia to ourselves and overseas?
Is it the distance, the exchange rate, our difficult-to-define culture? Some writers (I’m looking at you here, The Courier Mail) like to blame our congested airports. Seriously?
Top Comments
She touches on the factors of expense and distance, but I'm an American who's lived in Australia for a long time now, and one thing EVERYONE seems to forget is one very important deciding factor: Most people in the world simply don't get the same amount of vacation time that Australians take for granted.
For example, most of my friends/family in the US would LOVE to come to Australia. But, they only get 2 weeks of vacation a year, and aren't allowed to take more than one week at a time. It takes 2 days of travel to get to and from Australia, and the flights alone cost more than most Americans make in a month (before taxes). So, that leaves them with a 5-day vacation that'll cost 4 or 5 times more than going anywhere else.
No one has to SELL Australia. I can only speak for the Americans I know, but everyone I talk to is dying to come here. They just can't manage it. It's a pipe dream for the average American.
Australia's expensive, isolated and for such a big country there isn't actually much here, particularly if you don't want nature to be the focus of your holiday. Melbourne and Sydney are fantastic cities to live in, but from a tourism standpoint they don't have the same allure as say, NYC, Tokyo, London and Paris.
Europeans can be in a different country in the time it takes me to drive from my house to the nearest big shopping centre (and I'm not even in the sticks). America has a lot going on, and even on a long road trip there's always a bunch of great things to see, whereas here you can drive for days and the most exciting thing to happen will be getting a Magnum at the servo.
Accommodation is hideously expensive (I've stayed in a modern hotel in the heart of London for less than a night at a dumpy, dirty motel in the middle of nowhere costs here) and rarely up to international standards, service is lacklustre, public transport isn't great and isn't geared up for tourists in the same way as foreign PT... Australia's a great place to live, but it's not a great place to visit when you consider the costs and time needed.