Chlidonias presents: Bustralia

Chlidonias

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"Chlidonias presents: Bustralia"


Starring Chlidonias

Written and directed by Chlidonias

Original music and songs performed by Chlidonias (not available in this format)




I was going to do a little Australian bus trip in 2020, and then in 2021, and then in 2022, but each time something covid-related would happen so I just remained within New Zealand for the duration. My first overseas trip after covid was Vanuatu in 2023 (see here: Chlidonias versus Vanuatu), and then I finally got a proper trip last year where I went to China and Japan (see here: Chlidonias Goes To Asia, part seven: 2024-2025).

I was intending to go somewhere more exciting this year after that last trip but the planning ran into overtime and I got about a month behind schedule and would then have been running into the rainy season in that place (and that would make travel in some parts impossible), so I have postponed it until next year. In the meantime I decided to revive my Australian bus trip idea.

I’m not at the ideal time for the Australian trip either – it should have been at least a couple of months earlier before it gets too hot – but the benefit is that it doesn’t need much advance planning, I don’t need visas, there’s no time limit for how long I can stay in the country, and everybody speaks English (of a sort).

My original idea (during covid) had been to just spend a few days around Adelaide because I've never been to South Australia before, and then head up to Alice Springs for a few more days because I've never been into the centre of Australia before (or to the Northern Territory, which is the state Alice is in). But then, well, my plans got a little out of control when I discovered that Greyhound has a National Whimit Pass (as in, you can travel on a whim) for various lengths of time from 15 to 120 days. These have gone up in price in the last few years since I found out about them, but they currently cost AU$559 for the 30 day pass, AU$639 for 60 days, or AU$799 for 90 days. The pass gives unlimited bus travel over all of their routes within the country for the chosen time-period - as a price comparison the 20 hours from Adelaide to Alice Springs and the 22 hours from Alice Springs to Darwin can cost upwards of AU$600 together, so even the 60 day unlimited-bus-travel pass barely costs more than just those two buses together.

There is a map on this page showing where all the bus routes are: National Whimit Travel Passes


So I will be starting out as planned, “beginning” in Adelaide (although I’m actually flying into Melbourne first) and then heading up to Alice Springs. Then it will be onwards north towards Darwin, a little side-track westwards to Broome, and afterwards east across Queensland to the imaginatively-named town of Townsville via Mt Isa and Julia Creek. From Townsville I’ll go north up to Cairns and then back south down the east coast with any stops along the way which take my fancy.

That’s the plan anyway. It depends to some extent on where or if I can get affordable hotels along the way. I have discovered that Australia is now way more expensive than it used to be. Even just from the original planning four or five years ago everywhere has skyrocketed in price. It’s like prices went up during covid to compensate for the lower tourist numbers and then they just kept going up from that when things picked up again. There are hostels in places like Sydney or Melbourne where even dorm beds are up to AU$100 a night. It’s ridiculous.

I have no idea how it's all going to go in practice, but that's why it's fun. I don’t really expect things to go swimmingly. For one thing, it’s extremely difficult to get anywhere in Australia without a car. The buses only travel along the main highways so you end up in towns and cities, but invariably anywhere you actually want to reach is somewhere outside that town or city and in Australia most of the non-major centres don’t have much (or sometimes any) public transport. There are already a few places I had to drop because when I looked them up there was effectively no way to do them without your own vehicle. It also doesn’t help that so many of the towns across inland and northern Australia are described as being extremely unsafe.

Basically the wildlife-watching on this trip is going to be in broad strokes rather than fine detail.
 
You looked at the Jetstar flight and thought you'd like to spend 10 times as long sitting somewhere less comfortable.

I would say that at least you can take your liquids on the bus, but you can take all the liquids you like on domestic flights in Australia so...
 
You looked at the Jetstar flight and thought you'd like to spend 10 times as long sitting somewhere less comfortable.

I would say that at least you can take your liquids on the bus, but you can take all the liquids you like on domestic flights in Australia so...

Kiwis in Australia are like durians in Asia - not permitted on planes on account of the smell.
 
What creature is your new profile picture? Some kind of otter?

It's from a classic 1984 fantasy movie from the director of several other blockbusters, such as Das Boot, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, The Perfect Storm and Troy. I saw The NeverEnding Story when I was 9 years old and at that time it was brilliant. :) I have no idea how it holds up these days, in an era of CGI dominance. I suspect the puppetry is dated and yet nostalgic for film buffs like me.

Neverendingstoryposter.jpg
 
It's from a classic 1984 fantasy movie from the director of several other blockbusters, such as Das Boot, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, The Perfect Storm and Troy. I saw The NeverEnding Story when I was 9 years old and at that time it was brilliant. :) I have no idea how it holds up these days, in an era of CGI dominance. I suspect the puppetry is dated and yet nostalgic for film buffs like me.

Neverendingstoryposter.jpg
Thanks! I was mostly making a reference to the old running joke of people not knowing what Chlidonias' old profile picture was, but I will fully admit I actually had no idea what it was from.
 
Do you drive @Chlidonias ? Its actually not expensive to lease a car for several weeks, and if you got a 4x4, imagine how much of the country would open up to you! It would also be an option to sleep in, and negates the fear of towns being unsafe.... you simply wouldn't have to stop in those places....
 
Thanks! I was mostly making a reference to the old running joke of people not knowing what Chlidonias' old profile picture was, but I will fully admit I actually had no idea what it was from.
The Neverending Story avatar is also a running joke. It started out in one of my Asian trips from a comment someone made, and then I used to swap my avatars between when I was on a trip (The Neverending Story avatar) and when I wasn't on a trip (whatever the other avatar is). But I forgot to use it on my last trip.
 
Do you drive @Chlidonias ? Its actually not expensive to lease a car for several weeks, and if you got a 4x4, imagine how much of the country would open up to you! It would also be an option to sleep in, and negates the fear of towns being unsafe.... you simply wouldn't have to stop in those places....
No, I don't drive. That's why I'm doing a bus trip...
 
I'm now in Melbourne.

I don't particularly like flying. Not so much the flying part, more the taking-off and landing parts, because those are when you're most likely to die. It was very windy in Melbourne and the plane was bucking all over the place as it came in, although the touch-down itself was very smooth. A kid started calling out "We made it! We made it!" after we landed.

The ATM at the airport charged me a fee of AU$8.20 to get out some money! All the ATMs in Australia charge to be used I think, which is utterly ridiculous, although I'm hoping it's not going to be that much normally! You also have to pay a surcharge fee to use your card when buying things in shops, which is also ridiculous. So it's either pay a fee to get out cash at an ATM, or pay a fee every time you pay with a card.

I took the Skybus into the city from the airport. The girl at the counter where I bought the ticket was playing some game on her phone. Apparently it was vitally important because she kept playing it with one hand while serving me.

After checking into my hotel I went to the nearby Coles supermarket to buy some bread and things for the following couple of days, and then - because it was now dark - headed up the road to Flagstaff Gardens to see if I could find any Brush-tailed Possums which I did easily.
 
I'm now in Melbourne.

I don't particularly like flying. Not so much the flying part, more the taking-off and landing parts, because those are when you're most likely to die. It was very windy in Melbourne and the plane was bucking all over the place as it came in, although the touch-down itself was very smooth. A kid started calling out "We made it! We made it!" after we landed.

The ATM at the airport charged me a fee of AU$8.20 to get out some money! All the ATMs in Australia charge to be used I think, which is utterly ridiculous, although I'm hoping it's not going to be that much normally! You also have to pay a surcharge fee to use your card when buying things in shops, which is also ridiculous. So it's either pay a fee to get out cash at an ATM, or pay a fee every time you pay with a card.

I took the Skybus into the city from the airport. The girl at the counter where I bought the ticket was playing some game on her phone. Apparently it was vitally important because she kept playing it with one hand while serving me.

After checking into my hotel I went to the nearby Coles supermarket to buy some bread and things for the following couple of days, and then - because it was now dark - headed up the road to Flagstaff Gardens to see if I could find any Brush-tailed Possums which I did easily.
Yeah it was extremely windy today, easily one of the windiest days we've had here in quite some time - just your luck!

Re. the ATMS, not all charge fees. If it's an ATM from the main banks, they don't but you'd need an Australian debit card to avoid the fee. Because you were at the airport, it was likely far more expensive (as is everything there to be fair). It shouldn't be much elsewhere.

Flagstaff Gardens is full of Brush Tailed Possums, and the park isn't overly big too without two many trees (unlike the other inner city parks), so they are easy to find, especially after nightfall. I work close by and it's not uncommon to even see one taking a stroll around the park in the day time!
 
Re. the ATMS, not all charge fees. If it's an ATM from the main banks, they don't but you'd need an Australian debit card to avoid the fee. Because you were at the airport, it was likely far more expensive (as is everything there to be fair). It shouldn't be much elsewhere.
My understanding is that the main banks don't even have many of their own ATMs any more, most ATMs are from other companies. But in any case, it doesn't change things for me because they're not my banks. I think a foreign card is going to be charged more than an Australian card as well ... so, we'll see what the fee is next time I have to get out some cash...
 
With the possible exception of some of the very out of the way places you’re going, you’ll get by fine without cash. Keep cash withdrawals to a minimum, especially in cities.
 
My understanding is that the main banks don't even have many of their own ATMs any more, most ATMs are from other companies. But in any case, it doesn't change things for me because they're not my banks. I think a foreign card is going to be charged more than an Australian card as well ... so, we'll see what the fee is next time I have to get out some cash...
That is true, they tend to have their ATMS at their own bank sites these days. And yes, your card will likely be charged more if it's not an Australian card. The fee next time shouldn't be as much as it was at the airport though (depending on where you go). Inner city will probably still be quite expensive.
 
With the possible exception of some of the very out of the way places you’re going, you’ll get by fine without cash. Keep cash withdrawals to a minimum, especially in cities.
...except Australian businesses put a surcharge fee on card transactions, which will likely work out more expensive than an ATM fee (I'll need to see what the fee is on a non-airport ATM).
 
"Chlidonias presents: Bustralia"


Starring Chlidonias

Written and directed by Chlidonias

Original music and songs performed by Chlidonias (not available in this format)




I was going to do a little Australian bus trip in 2020, and then in 2021, and then in 2022, but each time something covid-related would happen so I just remained within New Zealand for the duration. My first overseas trip after covid was Vanuatu in 2023 (see here: Chlidonias versus Vanuatu), and then I finally got a proper trip last year where I went to China and Japan (see here: Chlidonias Goes To Asia, part seven: 2024-2025).

I was intending to go somewhere more exciting this year after that last trip but the planning ran into overtime and I got about a month behind schedule and would then have been running into the rainy season in that place (and that would make travel in some parts impossible), so I have postponed it until next year. In the meantime I decided to revive my Australian bus trip idea.

I’m not at the ideal time for the Australian trip either – it should have been at least a couple of months earlier before it gets too hot – but the benefit is that it doesn’t need much advance planning, I don’t need visas, there’s no time limit for how long I can stay in the country, and everybody speaks English (of a sort).

My original idea (during covid) had been to just spend a few days around Adelaide because I've never been to South Australia before, and then head up to Alice Springs for a few more days because I've never been into the centre of Australia before (or to the Northern Territory, which is the state Alice is in). But then, well, my plans got a little out of control when I discovered that Greyhound has a National Whimit Pass (as in, you can travel on a whim) for various lengths of time from 15 to 120 days. These have gone up in price in the last few years since I found out about them, but they currently cost AU$559 for the 30 day pass, AU$639 for 60 days, or AU$799 for 90 days. The pass gives unlimited bus travel over all of their routes within the country for the chosen time-period - as a price comparison the 20 hours from Adelaide to Alice Springs and the 22 hours from Alice Springs to Darwin can cost upwards of AU$600 together, so even the 60 day unlimited-bus-travel pass barely costs more than just those two buses together.

There is a map on this page showing where all the bus routes are: National Whimit Travel Passes


So I will be starting out as planned, “beginning” in Adelaide (although I’m actually flying into Melbourne first) and then heading up to Alice Springs. Then it will be onwards north towards Darwin, a little side-track westwards to Broome, and afterwards east across Queensland to the imaginatively-named town of Townsville via Mt Isa and Julia Creek. From Townsville I’ll go north up to Cairns and then back south down the east coast with any stops along the way which take my fancy.

That’s the plan anyway. It depends to some extent on where or if I can get affordable hotels along the way. I have discovered that Australia is now way more expensive than it used to be. Even just from the original planning four or five years ago everywhere has skyrocketed in price. It’s like prices went up during covid to compensate for the lower tourist numbers and then they just kept going up from that when things picked up again. There are hostels in places like Sydney or Melbourne where even dorm beds are up to AU$100 a night. It’s ridiculous.

I have no idea how it's all going to go in practice, but that's why it's fun. I don’t really expect things to go swimmingly. For one thing, it’s extremely difficult to get anywhere in Australia without a car. The buses only travel along the main highways so you end up in towns and cities, but invariably anywhere you actually want to reach is somewhere outside that town or city and in Australia most of the non-major centres don’t have much (or sometimes any) public transport. There are already a few places I had to drop because when I looked them up there was effectively no way to do them without your own vehicle. It also doesn’t help that so many of the towns across inland and northern Australia are described as being extremely unsafe.

Basically the wildlife-watching on this trip is going to be in broad strokes rather than fine detail.
Uff, getting around them parts of Aus without a car is very optimistic. Especially the NT is gonna be hard I think. Even just going to Territory Wildlife Park will be a struggle, let alone any of the good wildlife areas. But it's gonna be interesting to read how you get on and will keep my fingers crossed for ya. :)
 
Have you looked into getting Ubers or Lyfts or something similar? That might help you get to a lot of the interesting places.
 
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