Layne Beachley – My Top 5 Places in Australia

Layne Beachley was awarded the Order of Australia in 2015 and she has won 7 world championship surfing titles – an achievement unparalleled by any other surfer – female or male.

She achieved this distinction despite tragic circumstances, some severe health problems, and the unbending discrimination against women surfers.

Layne was given up for adoption by her 17 year-old mother. And her adoptive mother died when Layne was just six. At age seven, Layne resolved to prove her worth by being the best in the world at something.

Strong-willed and determined that “ I must do it”,  she became world champion surfer 6 years in a row. But a massive wave that smashed her spinal cord, plus bouts of chronic fatigue syndrome and depression, forced her to stay out of the water for 6 months.

After that time of enforced introspection, she came back to win her 7th world title. This time she was driven, not by fierce competitiveness, but by the sheer love of surfing.

Even with 7 world titles, her prize earnings were only one fifth of those of the top male surfer, who actually only had one world championship to his credit.  Whenever female surfers travelled around the world to compete, they were only paid a fraction of the money paid to male competitors. The official surfing association steadfastly refused to increase the prizes for women, so Layne set up the Beachley Classic to increase their prize money and ensure that women enjoyed the same opportunities and conditions in the sport as the men.

And in the same spirit she has set up the Aim For The Stars Foundation to assist girls and women facing adversity to achieve their goals.

“For the first eight years of my surfing career I was my sole financial supporter. A typical week would consist of sixty hours waiting tables, folding t-shirts, teaching people to roller blade and a total one hour of surfing ” says Layne.

The Foundation awards a minimum of $70,000 worth of scholarships each year in a diverse range of fields. In 2015 there were scholarships for rowing, indigenous nursing, cross country running, theatre direction, and paediatrics.

The only criteria for eligibility to apply is to be female, over 12 years, and to have a defined goal and passion. Applications for 2016 are now open. For applications and details of the  major fundraising event to be held on August 7th go to www.aimforthestars.com.au 

Layne is committed to remaining motivated and fit enough to surf until she is 80.

Layne Beachley

Layne Beachley

Layne’s Top 5 Places:

 

Layne Beachley surfing in Noosa

Layne Beachley surfing in Noosa

Noosa

As a former professional surfer and still hitting the waves every day, one of my favourite places to visit for a relaxed surfing holiday in north Queensland is Noosa. With so much to see and do in the event the swell isn’t cooperating, Noosa is historically renowned for its sheer beauty and pristine emerald green warm water, beautifully framed by the National Park. When the waves are pumping, the points offer an abundance of world class waves that give you one of the longest leg burning rides, making it an atmosphere unmatched anywhere in the world.

 

 

 

 

At Uluru

At Uluru

The Northern Territory

I enjoy taking a break from the ocean and immersing myself in nature which is why I absolutely love the Northern Territory, especially Uluru, Kings Canyon and Litchfield National Park. If you want to experience the outback and traditional Australia then a trip to the red centre is an absolute necessity. The Tali Wiru ‘dining under the outback sky’ experience at Uluru offers extraordinary gourmet cuisine while the sun sets over Ayres Rock as a backdrop, then work it off the next day with a mountain bike ride around the big red rock and feel the powerful presence of indigenous ancestry. The hike into Kings Canyon is a wonderful way to start the day and the best way to observe the region from above. Lichfield has an abundance of waterfalls, swimming holes, nature hikes and camp grounds.

 

Sydney Harbour bridge

Sydney Harbour bridge

Sydney

Naturally there is no place like home and my favourite city in the world is Sydney. We have the most beautiful beaches in the world that are very user friendly, monitored by lifeguards all year round and great for surfers of all skill levels, from beginners to world champions. A trip to Sydney is not complete without a ride across Sydney harbour on a ferry, presenting you with the time to soak in the natural beauty and diversity of this great city. To put it all in perspective, I thoroughly recommend walking to the top of the Harbour Bridge, even if you have a fear of heights!

 

Layne with husband, INXS star Kirk Pengilly and their camper

Layne with husband, INXS star Kirk Pengilly and their camper

El Questro

If you want to spoil yourself and discover one of the most magnificent locations Australia has to offer, look no further than El Questro in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Kirk and I hired a 4WD camper and drove the Gibb River Road from Broome to Darwin, rewarding ourselves half way with a luxurious stay in the Homestead. It is an exclusive retreat perched atop of the Chamberlain Gorge with magnificent panoramic views of the Gorge and river systems from Sunrise to Sunset. It is the ideal place to fully appreciate the untamed beauty of the Kimberley and is nothing short of 5 star luxury.

 

Margaret River from a helicopter

Margaret River from a helicopter

Margaret River

Western Australia is only 4 hours away from the eastern states but once you arrive you feel like you are a million miles from care. I absolutely love the Margaret River region because it has everything I want to experience on a holiday. Wonderful accommodation choices (my favourite is the Wyndham Resort at Dunsborough), fantastic restaurants that will amaze you with their culinary options, lively bars, beautiful beaches and plenty of adventure. The region is renowned for it’s wineries and cellar doors which are some of the most spectacular in the world so make sure you go with a designated driver or enjoy one of the many awesome wine tours on offer.

 

Travel Tips:

1. Safety first. Always let friends or family at home know where you are going and when you expect to return so if something unexpected occurs there will be someone keeping an eye out for you.

2. Plan ahead. Once you have decided where you want to visit, jump online or talk to people who have been there to give you some insiders knowledge on things to do and see off the beaten track.

For more information about Layne see www.laynebeachley.com

Photos courtesy of Layne Beachley & news.com.au

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Di Morrissey – My Top 5 Places in Australia

Di Morrissey is one of Australia’s most successful writers. She has written 24 best-selling novels and 2 children’s books.

Before publishing her first novel Heart of The Dreaming in 1991, she travelled the world as a journalist, television presenter and producer, actor, and diplomat’s wife. What followed was not only extraordinary success as a writer, but also a long-standing activism on behalf of the environment.

Each of her novels is anchored in a particular place that inspires her writing.

” The place chooses me. There’s generally a circumstance or I’m invited to go somewhere.  I went toad-busting in the Kimberley. And I began to see what was happening in the Kimberley and went, ‘No, no. I have to write about this.’ “

Di trained and worked as a journalist in Sydney and London. When she married her first husband, Peter Morrissey, a U.S. diplomat, they were posted to Hawaii, where she began a career as a television actor.

When her marriage ended, she returned to Australia and for eight years appeared on Channel Ten’s Good Morning Australia. Risking all, she left this job in order to write – a desire she had nurtured since childhood.

Many of Di’s books portray the challenge of a woman breaking the mould and striking out to explore her identity. They also integrate key social, political and cultural issues into the narrative. They are all Australian stories, even when their settings are elsewhere, e.g. Burma (Myanmar), Malaysia or Vietnam.

Like many of us, Di was more familiar with foreign destinations than with Australia. That changed when she began filming stories and travelling with Good Morning Australia. In her own words, she “ fell in love with ” her country and realised how special and important it is that “ we look after our country.”

Those feelings led her to join writer Tim Winton in their successful campaign to save the Ningaloo Reef (read WomanGoingPlaces on Ningaloo Reef for Women Travellers) as well as her involvement in many other environmental issues.

She also actively campaigned for the release of Aung Sang Suu Kyi, which led her to Burma (Myanmar) and the subject of her book The Golden Land in 2012. She established a school outside Mandalay and set up the Golden Land Education Foundation in order to raise funds for the school.

To read more about Di and her books go to her website: http://dimorrissey.com.au

To find out more about Di’s school in Burma go to:  www.goldenlandfoundation.org

Di’s Top 5 Places:

 

Broome

Broome

Broome

I passed through Broome in 1983 when filming for the TV programme Good Morning Australia and found a sleepy, far flung dot on the Kimberley coast, proclaiming  itself to be an international pearling centre. In the time I was there it made an indelible impression on me –  not just the dramatic scenery, but the historical aura that surrounded it still alive with the remains of an old pearling lugger in the mangrove swamps, the pearling masters’ latticed and distinctive homes and the still existing Chinese and Japanese influences. The old pearling sheds had been  turned into pearl shops selling the magnificent pearls produced by the local pinctada maxima oyster in the pristine, warm azure waters just off the coast. There is no more perfect pearl in the world than Australia’s South Sea Pearl – a product of technology and nature.

Now the old world is married to upmarket tourism where the magnificent Cable Beach stretches for miles and where camels led by Afghan cameleers now carry tourists along the sunset beach. The blue sky is extraordinary as are the turquoise waters. A coastline of blood red rocks and sand record that it was where dinosaurs once walked.

It’s always been a town that welcomed travelers, those getting away from it all and those whose lineage is woven into the local multicultural heritage. In Broome you feel you are in another world, far from mundane realities.

There’s a definite magic on the northwest coast which inspired Tears of the Moon and Kimberley Sun. 

 

The Kimberley

The Kimberley

Mitchell Plateau & The Kimberley

The Kimberley in WA is a vast area of stunning beauty sheltering one of the last pristine wilderness areas on the planet. The magnificent gorges, rivers, waterfalls and plateaus are not only spectacular scenery but home to the world’s oldest art and sacred sites. The many indigenous tribes of the Kimberley, although some no longer living on country, respect and observe traditional ceremonies. I spent time with Ngarinyin elders on the Mitchell Plateau, learning about their culture and visiting secret sites of Wandjina art which was a huge privilege and evolved into my novel, The Songmaster.

A lot of places are difficult to access, some require permission from traditional owners, some are best seen by helicopter, but it is an unforgettable experience to travel the Gibb River Road. Like so many precious places in Australia, you should  see it before mining interests ruin it.

 

Heron Island

Heron Island

Heron Island

The Great Barrier Reef is our best known natural feature, and the one most seriously threatened by overdevelopment.

Heron Island is  one of the few islands in north Queensland that is  actually part of  the reef and is a naturalist’s wonderland. It’s always been a modest, simple place that attracted nature lovers. It’s the sort of place which had no loud nightlife, little communication with the outside world and where people went to bed early to get up before dawn to watch the magnificent green and loggerhead turtles come ashore to lay their eggs. Months later the hatchlings make their perilous dash to the sea.

You can walk around the island, whale watch, swim, dive and snorkel amongst the magnificent coral, take a boat outside the reef to fish and yet because it is so low key you feel you have the place to yourself. There has been a University of Queensland  research station on the island for fifty years. I spent time with marine biologists and researchers and it was especially exciting to be there the night of the coral spawning when the sea turned crimson as the coral released millions of spores into the sea to hopefully form new coral clusters and cays over time.

Heron Island is the setting for my novel The Reef.

 

Dorrigo National Park

Dorrigo National Park

Bellingen NSW

I was looking for a small, pretty, peaceful town for the location  for my novel The Road BackA place where there is an interesting, caring community, where the beautiful environment is treasured, a place where residents hold memories of idyllic childhoods, neighbours who look out for each other, where heritage homes are restored and gardens made showplaces – an oasis place in this troubled world.

I lived for many years in beautiful Byron Bay, but its ethos changed as money moved in and the colourful characters (an attraction in the town) were moved out. Driving between Byron and Sydney I always made a stop to see friends in Bellingen. So I went back recently and stayed and explored the area of Dorrigo plateau, the country surrounds and the rainforests. The lovely Bellinger River is perfect for swimming, fishing, kayaking, rafting, birdwatching, or a picnic.

There’s a lot of old history in the area and its scenery has been painted, photographed and filmed. It was used as the setting for the film ‘Oscar and Lucinda’ and the  little church at Glennifer was instantly recognisable. There are a lot of  cute B&B’s both in town and out in the picturesque  countryside and plenty of good food. The place is so idyllic that it seems too good to be true and yet just a few minutes for bustling Coffs Harbour with its myriad of facilities.

 

 

Manning Valley - Flat Rock lookout

Manning Valley – Flat Rock lookout

The Manning Valley NSW

The green, green valley of dairy farms dating back to pioneer days, and even earlier times when cedar logging sustained the infant colony of NSW, is a magical place to me. The beautiful Manning River which rises in Barrington Tops in the Great Dividing Range flows down through the valley in a massive delta system and out to sea.

The historic town of Wingham in the valley  is where I was born and the house my grandfather built is little changed from those days. I had been living for many years in Byron Bay, but on a return visit to the valley walking through Wingham a lovely old man stopped me in the street to say, “I went to school with your Mum, love.”  I realised this place holds my earliest memories and my roots are still deep in this valley, so I moved back in 2007.

There are wonderful scenic attractions from Ellenborough Falls on the Elands Plateau, the villages around Wingham and riverfront Taree. The river runs through the heart of the valley, an artery that refreshes us  and is great for fishing, boating and kayaking, or, as in my case, a place to sit and dream, to remember and to find inspiration.

My book The Valley is set here.

 

Travel Tips:

* Don’t buy cheap luggage, it’s not worth it.

* Same with a good travel agent.

* I always carry a pashmina or a sarong and basic toiletries and spare reading glasses   (and a book!) in my hand luggage.

* Do your homework about the place you’re going to before you leave.

* Choose gifts that are small and light.

* And talk to people along the way!

 

 

 

 

Tracey Spicer – My Top 5 Places in Australia

When Tracey Spicer issued a call in October 2017 on Twitter for people to contact her if they had been subjected to workplace harassment and assault, she was astonished by the response.

More than 1,500 people contacted her with their #MeToo stories. Tracey then in 2018 spearheaded the establishment of Now Australia with the aim of raising funds to provide counselling and legal support to victims of workplace abuse.

In the 2018 Honours Awards, Tracey Spicer was awarded an AM for her service to broadcast media as a journalist, television presenter and her work as an ambassador for social welfare groups.

Last year Tracey published her book ‘ The Good Girl Stripped Bare’.  She describes it as a  ’femoir’  – part memoir, part manifesto about the barriers women face in the workplace. Tracey is one of Australia’s best know women in media and has worked as a news anchor for national news, current affairs and lifestyle programs for a number of networks.

From her experience she has seen that for a woman, network news is less about good journalism and more about good looks. In her book, Tracey describes the pressure on being a ‘good girl’ and obediently accepting the helmet hair, masses of makeup and fatuous fashion. And the instructions from bosses to ‘stick your tits out’, ‘lose two inches off your arse’, and ‘quit before you’re too long in the tooth’.

But when Tracey was sacked by email after having a baby, she stripped off her ‘good girl’ role and turned ‘bad’, taking legal action against the network for pregnancy discrimination.

The memoir follows in the spirit of an earlier TedxSouthBankWomen Tracey delivered.  During this talk, Tracey ‘stripped bare’ item by item the encumbrances- clothing, make-up, hair- that women endure daily to keep up appearances. The video went viral with over 1.5 million viewers on YouTube enthusiastically responding to her bare-faced challenge to society’s unreasonable and unrealistic expectations of how a woman should look.

 

To read more about Tracey visit her website www.spicercommunications.biz

Tracey’s Top 5 Places:

uluru-at-sunset

Uluru

Uluru

I’m embarrassed to admit that it took me 46 years to visit this remarkable place. It was a wonderful education for the kids, about Australia’s indigenous heritage. There’s a terrific training program for indigenous youth, run by Voyages.

To read more about and see photos of Uluru go to  https://womangoingplaces.com.au/uluru-ayers-rock-australia

 

 

 

Far-North-Queensland

North Queensland

       Far North Queensland

OK, I admit it: I’m a Queenslander. And I love that laid-back attitude. Everyone in Palm Cove or Port Douglas says “g’day” or “darl” or “luv”. It makes me feel right at home. Of course, the Daintree is simply stunning, especially when seen from the SkyRail Rainforest Cableway.

 

 

 

Questacon

Questacon

Canberra

Oh dear, it’s time for another admission: we are a family of political junkies. Canberra is also home to some of the best museums in the country, including Questacon. Truly, we’d go and live there if it wasn’t so far from the beach!

 

 

 

 

 

Falls Creek

Falls Creek

 Falls Creek

We love going here in winter, because the ski in-ski out accommodation is so convenient for families. The restaurants are also fabulous, including Three Blue Ducks with its paddock-to-plate philosophy.

 

 

 

 

Emily Bay Norfolk Island

Emily Bay Norfolk Island

Norfolk Island

Yes, it is part of Australia! I took my nine-year-old son there last week, because he’s studying the First Fleet at the moment. The history is fascinating, and the beach at Emily Bay is like a tiny piece of Tahiti.

 

Travel Tips:

Pack light, especially if you’re travelling with children. We all take too many things with us!

Do something different. We just got back from a week on a sailing boat. It was the best family holiday we’ve ever had.