|
Welcome to
resorts tours and accommodation on
the South Coast of New South Wales.
Ocean-washed
beaches for swimming, fishing, sun-bathing extend all the way from
Berry to the Victorian border. But the South Coast has much, much
more than beaches.
Just
ask the Sydneysiders, who return time and time again to favourite
holiday haunts -to tourist centres, historic towns, fishing villages
and secluded
havens
around Jervis Bay and Sussex
Inlet, to places with such serendipitous names
as Mollymook, Ulladulla, Narooma, Bermagui, Merimbula and Pambula.
As you drive
down the Princes Highway, there’s an ever-changing backdrop
to the golden, or dazzling white, beaches—rugged mountain
ranges, rivers tumbling through gorges or meandering across
green valleys and then slipping into the sea; tranquil lakes; lush
dairy farms; native bushland in more than 300,000 hectares
of National Parks and State Forests.
There are all
the makings for adventure holidays — bushwalking, canoeing, horse riding,
four-wheel drive tracks and rock climbing,
with the special challenge of Pigeon House Mountain, west of
Ulladulla. Tranquillity
and beauty are conducive to lazy days, the waterways and ocean to
swimming, surfing, boating and fishing,
You’ll
find quieter waters at Sussex Inlet, Lake Conjola and the unusual
twin-lakes system at Tuross. The surf rolls in to a multitude of
sandy beaches between Shoalhaven
Heads and Eden. Some are tucked away along the George Bass Drive,
starting from Bateman’s Bay, a circular drive which passes the
beauty spots of Broulee and Mossy Point before rejoining the Princes
Highway just north of Moruya. Narooma, in a peaceful seaside setting,
has a spectacular golf course. Offshore is Montague Island, of
yachting fame, It is a closed sanctuary but, from the water, you can
see its rocky foreshores and playful penguins.
Further
down the coast is the Bega Valley famous for its cheeses, with its
colonial townships and rich pastureland. |