Essayer OR - Gratuit

Explore Australia’s Great Ocean Road

Reader's Digest India

|

February 2016

Australia’s Great Ocean Road aims to pull you back again and again.

- Jonathan B. Tourtellot

Explore Australia’s Great Ocean Road

A mob of kangaroos grazes in a chilly pasture, then flees in front of an approaching pickup truck. The herd looks like a bunch of deer on pogo sticks.

The scene is unfolding outside the ecolodge window I’m peering from on this early winter morning in August. It’s my second day on Australia’s Great Ocean Road, a scenic highway that follows the coastline west of Melbourne for about 240 km through Victoria.

Admittedly, I harbour some skepticism of this legendary road, wondering how the GOR could possibly rival my favourite US coastal drive: the long, winding, two-lane sections of California State Route 1.

These two drives are probably the only ones in the world that can claim the same mix: rugged scenery, some of Earth’s tallest trees, sea stacks of towering rock, and surfers.

But marsupial wildlife as comic relief? Well played, Australia.

Of course, I expected to encounter native flora and fauna on this road. What I hadn’t anticipated was how much I would also learn about local history and the refreshingly easy-going Aussies themselves, exemplified by my guide, Geoff Reynolds.

We begin our Great Ocean Road explorations as most do, leaving the town of Geelong, about an hour outside of Melbourne, and heading westward through a commercial strip.

But beyond the generic line-up of Mc Donald’s, Domino’s a n d KFC, something more intriguing appears: Narana Aboriginal Cultural Centre, a craft shop and Aboriginal community project. It’s a fitting first stop, dedicated to the people whose ancestors predated European arrivals by millennia.

Cultural interpreter Ian Kirby of the Wathaurong tribe pulls me away from an engrossing map showing the continent’s former tribal territories to demonstrate a didgeridoo [a musical instrument]. Then he takes us out back for boomerang practice.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

RD RECOMMENDS

HUMANS IN THE LOOP

time to read

4 mins

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

LIFE'S Like That

Take That!

time to read

1 mins

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

What Do ANIMALS FEEL?

IT IS NOT ONLY HUMANS WHO FEEL EMPATHY, SADNESS AND JOY. OTHER SPECIES ALSO APPEAR TO HAVE COMPLEX EMOTIONS

time to read

7 mins

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

News from the WORLD OF MEDICINE

Fermentable Fibre Works Like A Natural Ozempic

time to read

1 mins

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

LAUGHTER THE BEST Medicine

A man calls a family meeting to discuss an exceptionally high phone bill: Dad: “This is unacceptable, I don’t use the home phone, I use my work phone.”

time to read

2 mins

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

GOOD NEWS ABOUT BRAIN CANCER

An experimental new treatment makes tumours melt away

time to read

14 mins

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

ALL in a Day's WORK

Every year, emergency responders at E-Comm 911 in British Columbia share some of the less- than-urgent calls that they've fielded:

time to read

2 mins

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

To-Do List GOT YOU DOWN?

Understanding the psychology of goals can help tick things off—and keep you on track

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

WHEN AFFIRMATIONS MEET EDUCATION

Self-help says manifest joy. Teaching says manifest patience, coffee, and an early retirement plan. This Teacher's Day, here are some positive mantras only educators could write.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India

TO MY UNKNOWN BENEFACTOR

Stories of nameless Good Samaritans that reminds us that even the smallest acts of compassion can never be forgotten

time to read

8 mins

September 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size