
The island of Tasmania is Australia's smallest and most southerly state. With no land to its west before Africa, and nothing but Antartica to its south, Tasmania can seem an isolated and forbidding place, lashed by cold winds and rain from the Southern Ocean. This was certainly the impression it gave many convicts who were transported from England to serve out their lives in the penal colonies established by the British in the nineteenth century.
However, there is another side to this island which today draws ever growing numbers of adventurous souls. The rugged interior holds some of Australia's wildest mountains, forests and rivers - wilderness to be compared equally with that of New Zealand or Patagonia. For others, the colonial heritage is of interest, as well as the common pleasures of resting in one of the world's more quiet and welcoming places. And although the winters are wet, the summers are filled with long hot days that can be spent lying on beaches of the purest quartz sand and clearest turquoise seas.
Take a moment to browse the pages here, and see what Tasmania has to offer the tourist and adventurer. There may be other places in Australia or the world that have longer beaches, older forests, higher mountains or more charming towns. But none will have all four of these, and all accessible within a day.
Adelaide
Albany
Alice Springs
Ballarat
Beechworth
Bondi Beach
Brisbane
Broken Hill
Broome
Byron Bay
Cairns
Canberra
Central Highlands
Collaroy
Coober Pedy
Darling Harbour
Darwin
East Coast
Geelong
Geraldton
Gladstone
Great Barrier Reef
Hobart
Innaloo
Kakadu National Park
Kalbarri
Kalgoorlie-Boulder
Launceston
Liverpool
Magnetic Island
Melbourne
Monkey Mia
Namadgi National Park
Newcastle
Noosa Junction
North-East
North-West
Perth
Portland
Quorn
Rainbow Beach
Richmond
Sorell
South-East
Springbrook
Stepney
Sunshine Coast
Sydney
Tasmania
Warrnambool
West Coast
William Creek
Young