Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Week
The Week
National
The Week Staff

Trip of the week: a road trip around Tasmania

With its diverse wildlife, sandy beaches and tropical coves, Tasmania packs a lot of scenery

Tasmania is only about the size of Ireland, but it packs in an awful lot of scenery, said James Stewart in The Daily Telegraph. The east coast is “scalloped by astonishing beaches and lapped by sea the colour of kingfishers”; the west is “like Scotland on steroids”; and the land in between is an “Elysian” wilderness that isn’t much visited by international tourists, but deserves to be.

To get a sense of it all, you need two weeks, really. Start in the capital Hobart. It is a lovely place for an amble – warehouses built by convicts now house galleries and cafés; and there are some great markets. Once you’ve recovered from your flight, head east to visit the Unesco-listed former convict colony Port Arthur (though be prepared to read some “grim” stories about the people who lived there), and make time for Maria Island National Park, too. It was also once a convict prison, but is now a “Noah’s Ark” of “madly bizarre wildlife”, including Tasmanian devils and Bennett’s wallabies. While you’re on the east coast, be sure to spend a day (or more) beach-hopping. Wineglass Bay has “dazzling” white powder, and Cosy Corner and Sloop Reef are both “magical” coves worthy of the tropics.

The northwest of Tasmania has a “special remoteness” that is really worth seeking out. If you’re there from September to March, you could visit Godfreys Beach to watch fairy penguins waddling ashore. The Tarkine isn’t to be missed either: “a mosaic of ancient forest, wild beaches, heath and untamed rivers”, it’s best appreciated from the 40-mile Tarkine Drive. After all that wilderness, head to Strahan for a “sedate” few days by the river (you can stay by the water at Risby Cove). Then wind your way back to Hobart along the Lyell Highway, making pit stops as you go. Whatever you do, you’ll leave Tassie awed by its landscape and aware “that you’ve barely scratched the surface”. 

Tasmanian Odyssey has a 14-day itinerary, excluding flights, from £1,565pp; tasmanianodyssey.com

Sign up for the Travel newsletter for destination inspiration and the latest news and trends

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.