Vistas of the Australian coastlines have spellbound millions of overseas visitors, but Australia’s arid interior still remains a mystery. Meet Nick Sullivan, 26-year-old video producer from Sydney, who spent a fortnight driving across the land down under, in search of what lies within Australia’s outback.
Read MoreA LOOK INTO PAPUA NEW GUINEA WITH ABBY BEARD
Traveling to a country does not always mean you should be a tourist in it - read about how Abby engaged with locals to hear their own stories, in order to bring about change in Papua New Guinea.
Read MoreHIKING NEW ZEALAND WITH DAN SADGROVE
As part of our Frequent Flyer series, we post follow up stories from previously spotlighted travelers. Dan is a visual researcher working in film and television who considers himself a slow traveler (he’s been on the road for over 18 months now). In his previous post, Dan shared about his time exploring Sierra Leone, though the extensive list of countries he’s visited range from Tanzania, Malaysia, The States, Jordan, Indonesia, and everything in between. Today he shares about his experiences being a tourist in his home country of New Zealand and the importance of appreciating nature’s endless beauty.
This trip was no homecoming - I treated this visit like a tourist would so I moved down to Wanaka, a little lake side town near Queenstown in the South Island and went from there. Wanaka is a more local, less touristy destination than Queenstown - which is famous for being the adventure capital of the world.
Read MoreAWARD WINNING PHOTOGRAPHY WITH CAM COPE
My name is Cam Cope; I’m a 29-year-old Australian travel journalist and photographer. I regularly contribute travel features to a range of print and online publications, present on travel photography philosophy and in 2015 I’ll be kicking off a brand new series of photo-workshops that I’m really excited about. When I’m not sailing in Patagonia, riding horses with nomads in Mongolia, lurching on the back of a truck in the Bolivian Andes, deep sea fishing in Samoa, hitch-hiking in the Canadian arctic, island hopping in Indonesia, scaling volcano craters in Vanuatu or out bush exploring Australian Aboriginal culture, I can usually be found at home base in the most livable city in the world (if you believe the Economist): Melbourne.
Read More