Sunday, February 24, 2019

Qantas announces plans for new direct international flights from Australia's east coas



Less time in the air means more time to get out and explore the world. For Aussie’s wishing to explore Europe and the United States, travel time could soon be cut significantly.


Qantas has announced plans for new direct flights from Australia’s east coast to destinations like London and New York, which we could see hitting the skies from early as 2022. Watch the full clip 


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“If the business case works, the aircraft will arrive in 2022,” Qantas CEO Alan Joyce told 9News. (iStock)

The airline is looking at the Boeing 797 to replace their fleet of domestic 737 aircraft – but as the 797 is yet to be confirmed, Qantas is cautious to lock in a final decision.


Currently, Qantas is on the hunt for the perfect aircraft to directly link Australia’s east coast with Europe and the United States.



“If the business case works, the aircraft will arrive in 2022,” Qantas CEO Alan Joyce told 9News. 

Saturday, February 23, 2019

Study Abroad: Trying travel, cuddling koalas in Australia


Studying abroad is an opportunity that not many students take advantage of in college; on average, less than 10 percent of students study abroad. But for communication major senior Kaci Snyder, studying abroad turned into an amazing opportunity.


Snyder went to Australia during the spring 2018 semester and came back with a new sense of confidence. Studying abroad and exploring Australia was something that Snyder had always wanted to do. 
“I took a surf lesson there, which I thought was so cool,” Snyder said. “My campus was on a nature preserve, so there were kangaroos all over the place. I was also just meeting people from all over the world all the time.” 
Snyder also spoke on how different Australian classroom experiences were compared to those at Geneseo. 
“For my science class, we traveled to this island and stayed there for two nights,” Snyder said. “We were learning about how the sand dunes affect different types of birds’ lives. It was cool to be able to travel to another island for free with the school because we can’t do that here.”
At times, Snyder traveled completely by herself. Solo travel allowed Snyder to challenge herself, meet new people and gain independence. Meeting people from all over the world opened up her mind to new perspectives. 
She explained that the process to go abroad was very long and that she began filling out all of the paperwork in September, about four months before she left. Most of the work she had to do included doing paper paperwork, writing a letter about why she wanted to go and retrieving letters of recommendation.
Snyder also felt that Geneseo helped her answer the questions that she had. She said that it was very stressful and that there were many things she didn’t know how to do, but the study abroad office really helped.  
“The study abroad office was really involved,” Snyder said. “I had a bunch of questions, as it was really confusing at times. I would just go there and they were really helpful.”
Snyder advises students who want to study abroad to save up as much money as they can. She believes it is an opportunity everyone should take, as many people regret not doing it in college.  She illustrates that she gained a lot of confidence and independence by going and that anyone else who goes will gain these attributes as well.
“I think it’s 100 percent worth it, no matter where you go,” Snyder said.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Take a road trip through Western Australia and its wonders




It was just a six-day trip last December, but I came away with unforgettable memories, over a thousand photographs, two bursting suitcases and an expanded waistline.


From breathtaking coastal views, to fresh produce paired with delicious wines, to great shopping deals, Western Australia has so much to offer.

The best way to really take it all in is on a road trip, where you can expect something different and exciting every day.
PERTH

Our trip started in this city that is full of great spots to eat, drink and take Insta-worthy pictures, especially along Elizabeth Quay and Yagan Square, where you can chill for hours in any of the many cocktail bars and restaurants.

Walking along, I was also surprised by the quality and quantity of the street art, in particular in the area surrounding Prince Lane.

ALBANY

We proceeded to Albany on the southern coast, stopping by Kojonup for a quick lunch at the Black Cockatoo, and taking a nice walk around its rose garden. It is a bit of a drive, about five hours, so the stopover was welcome.

On reaching Albany, however, all fatigue was forgotten.

As part of the Light and Dine package, which includes admission fees to the National Anzac Centre, the Field of Light Sunset Panorama tour and a shared tasting menu of local produce at The Garrison restaurant, we not only managed to catch a glimpse of a breathtaking sunset view, but also enjoy a delicious meal.

We moved on to the Field of Light: Avenue of Honour installation, where 16,000 lights line the walkways, as we walked off our food-babies and unwound from the day.

The next morning took us to The Gap and the Albany Wind Farm, where we were greeted with stunning views of the southern coastline.

For lunch, we stopped at Oranje Tractor Wine, where we ate fruit and fresh produce off the trees and shrubs, and were treated to a delicious Ploughman's lunch paired with refreshing wines.

At the Mount Romance sandalwood factory there is a beautiful little room where from Wednesdays to Sundays, you can book a one-hour The Cone, The Gong & The Bowl experience.

It makes use of the soothing scent of sandalwood, and is deeply meditative and beyond relaxing.
DENMARK

After about an hour's drive, we arrived in the town of Denmark, where we immersed ourselves in the wonders of nature at the Valley of the Giants Tree Top Walk. The canopy walk, suspended 40m above ground, took us into the lush greenery of Western Australia's Giant Tingle Trees.

But the bit that intrigued us the most were the trees along the Ancient Empire Walk, which over the years have developed hollows big enough to park a car in.

They had been hollowed out by forest fires and then expanded by fungus and insects.

It is said that some of these hollows can get so big that they can fit a hundred people in the heart of the tree - with wiggle room to spare. We wrapped up the day with a cooling dip in the calm, turquoise waters of the Greens Pool.

MARGARET RIVER

I must admit that much of our first day at Margaret River is a blur, what with the copious amounts of adult beverages to be tasted.

By 10am, we were at the Margaret River Distilling Company, where we went on a short gin tour and enjoyed a gin pairing session.

Do not overlook the whiskeys they have on offer too.

Later in the day, the wine-tasting at Voyager Estate made me rethink my long-held preference for European wines, particularly Cabernet Sauvignon, which is robust while being light and dangerously easy to drink.

I am slightly ashamed to admit that I may have had, before even realising it, put away a couple of glasses of this delicious nectar.

Nursing a mild hangover the next day, I was thoroughly refreshed by a relaxing Cape To Cape Walk, hosted by Walk Into Luxury.

It boasted coastal views like I had never seen before, taking us through unique Western Australian shrubbery and into the fresh seaside air and amazing views of clear blue waters - definitely a walk to remember, and one that is sure to rejuvenate even the most weary traveller.

Check out Dynasty Travel's Unique Perth and South West Australia experience at Natas Travel 2019 at Singapore Expo, Booth 6H01, from today to Sunday, 10am to 9.30pm.

Rangers first Kiwi NBL side to travel to Australia to face Southern Huskies

Harry Froling, who will be a key player for the Southern Huskies in the Kiwi NBL, works his way to the basket against the Breakers for the Adelaide 36ers.




Auckland's Super City Rangers will create New Zealand National Basketball League (NBL) history in April.

The Rangers will be the first NBL team to travel to Australia to play new entity, the Tasmania based Southern Huskies, on April 27.

In December, the Huskies were confirmed as the first Australian team to play in the New Zealand NBL, joining on a five-year deal.

The Huskies will play their first game against the Manawatū Jets in Palmerston North on April 18, before playing perennial title favourites, the Wellington Saints, a day later in Wellington on April 19. They will complete their first away trip in Napier against the Bay Hawks on April 21 before flying back to host the Rangers six days later.


On May 12, the Huskies host reigning Kiwi NBL champions, the Southland Sharks.

The Kiwi teams will visit Tasmania to play the Huskies at least once, while the Huskies will play each of the New Zealand teams away, playing doubleheaders each time they cross the ditch.

They will play home games in Hobart and Launceston.

As part of agreement for entry into the NBL, the Huskies will assist with the cost for New Zealand teams to travel to Tasmania to play. NBL board chair Iain Potter said that was essential as they did not want to increase the New Zealand teams' expenses through the move.

The eligibility rules have been adjusted.

All the teams in the league are allowed three imports. All teams in the league, including the Huskies, can have a New Zealander as a non-restricted player. The Huskies can have any Kiwi or Australian as an unrestricted player, unless they have played more than 7.5 minutes in the Australian NBL in the proceeding season.

Former Hobart Chargers coach Anthony Stewart will guide the Huskies for their inaugural season.

They have assembled a strong initial squad, containing Adelaide 36ers big man Harry Froling, the ANBL rookie of the year and a member of the Australian Boomers, as well as American imports Tre Nichols, Jalen Billups, and Mason Bragg.

The Kiwi sides in the 2019 NBL will again be the Jets, Saints, Sharks, Hawks, Rangers, Nelson Giants, Taranaki Mountain Airs, and Canterbury Rams.

 
Source

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Golf Tourism Market 2019 – Your Golf Travel, Golfbreaks, Golf Plaisir, EasyGolf Worldwide Australia, Golfasian





Overall, the Golf Tourism market performance is not developing as expected though many golf courses are under construction.
Factors such as growing number of golf courses worldwide, association initiatives and sponsorship deals, launch of low-cost airlines, as well as the growing popularity of professional golf tournaments, are bringing the opportunities of the development of Golf Tourism market globally.
The global Golf Tourism market is valued at 15500 million USD in 2018 and is expected to reach 15100 million USD by the end of 2024, growing at a CAGR of -0.6% between 2019 and 2024.
The Asia-Pacific will occupy for more market share in following years, especially in China, also fast growing India and Southeast Asia regions.
North America, especially The United States, will still play an important role which cannot be ignored. Any changes from United States might affect the development trend of Golf Tourism.
Europe also play important roles in global market, with market size of xx million USD in 2019 and will be xx million USD in 2024, with a CAGR of xx%.
Global Golf Tourism Market 2019-2024 report delivers a comprehensive research-based study of the market along with the market share, forecast data, in-depth analysis, and detailed overview of the Golf Tourism industry with respect to the global market. The Golf Tourism market report further emphasizes on driver and restraint factors in the global and regional level. For a complete understanding, the market also provides market segmentation and regional market analysis in a country-level market. The global Golf Tourism market analysis further provides pioneering landscape of market along with market size for 2016, 2017, and 2018, with a forecast till 2024 by product and by geography.Geographically, this report is segmented into several key Regions, with production, consumption, revenue, market share, and growth rate of Golf Tourism Production in these regions, from 2016 to 2024: USA, Europe, Japan, China, India, South East Asia. These regions are further categorized at the country level.

LITERARY TOURISM: OZ’S REAL EMERALD CITY – SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA



Sydney, Australia, is The Emerald City. There are other cities claiming the same title (I’m looking at you, Seattle) but none of them cast a twinkle compared to the sparkle of Sydney.


I mean, Sydney is green; like, really green. We’ve also had a number of bananas male leaders who originated from Sydney (Howard, Abbot, Turnbull, current Prime Minister Morrison). And it IS the largest city in the Land of Oz. All it needs is a bunch of reading nooks to discover your favourite Oz characters.



Oh, wait. We have that too. *wicked grin*



Welcome to the Wonderful Reading of Oz: Emerald City edition.
DOROTHY GALE – KINOKUNIYA BOOKSTORE, LEVEL 2, 500 GEORGE STREET, SYDNEY CBD

Located in The Galleries, high above the busy George Street, Kinokuniya Bookstore is The Bookstore worth battling through a city. It has all the favourite genres on offer but the real attraction is the extensive range of Japanese and Chinese books. It’s the largest collection in Australia. It is easy to imagine Dorothy enamoured with so many books that can’t be found anywhere else. Of course, you can always sit in the cafe after your purchase but if you can withhold on the drinkies, the best place to read up on Dorothy is in the Kids Section on the naturally lit bay-window seat, overlooking the busy street below.
TOTO – COOK+PHILLIP PARK, CNR COLLEGE AND WILLIAM STREET, SYDNEY CBD

For those of us who can empathise with Dorothy’s love for her little dog, Toto, the Cook+Phillip Park has a nice open area AND allows dogs to be off their leash. This is one of the few places very close to the city where you can catch some rays, play with your dog, and still have the quiet space for reading. And if the weather is less accommodating, you can always duck into the St Mary’s Cathedral next door. Stunning architecture with the peace and tranquillity to rival a library. Although, you won’t be able to bring Toto into this one.






Source

Sunday, February 17, 2019

Tourism Boom Drives ‘Unprecedented’ Hotel Development

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Australia's accommodation sector is set welcome 45,000 new rooms over the next six years catering to changing demands, travellers and demographics.

According to Tourism Accommodation Australia a wave of almost 300 new hotels, currently proposed or under construction, will boost the hotel industry which has suffered from a development hiatus of almost two decades.

The pipeline of projects will add to the $8 billion tourism industry which currently employs over 187,000 people.

Melbourne leads the growth push with 10,208 rooms approved or under construction, while Sydney has 6,084 in the pipeline.

Perth also has a significant amount of hotel rooms currently under construction, with 1,755 rooms to be added over the next two years.

TAA has forecast that 11,600 rooms are due to be added to the Sydney market and more than 15,100 expected in Melbourne.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Same-sex marriage boosting Australian tourism

Same-sex couples from overseas are flocking to Australia to get hitched, attracted to the natural beauty and marriage equality laws.
The global gay travel market is reportedly worth $300 billion, with Australia making up 0.3 per cent, but growing.
Marriage celebrant Stephen Lee has noticed a rise in same-sex couples choosing Australia to tie the knot in, particularly from Asian countries with conservative stances on marriage.
“For example in Singapore, being gay is actually still against the law,” Lee said.
Lee says he has married couples from overseas who “basically have to elope” to Australia to make their marriage dreams come true.

Friday, February 15, 2019

In Tour of Australia, Chinese Admire Clean Air but Bemoan Lack of Hot Drinking Water





CANBERRA, Australia — gThe Chinese tourists found Parliament House, one of Australia’s most enduring national symbols, well . . . underwhelming.
“County-level governments in China have fancier buildings. Am I right?” said Jimmy Zhao, a Shanghai-born tour guide, who last month led a group of 55 tourists mostly from China, but also Malaysia and Singapore, on a four-day bus tour of Australia’s East Coast.
The group giggled and agreed with Mr. Zhao’s assessment, but they were also impressed that, unlike in China, anyone could walk into the heart of Australia’s government. When Mr. Zhao, 53, pointed out a bathroom used by a former prime minister, one tourist sprinted off to experience the V.I.P. urinal.

“Today we are all senators!” shouted another Chinese visitor.
Tensions between Australia and China are at an all-time high — spurred, in part, by accusations of Chinese meddling in Australian politics — but the rate of Chinese tourists visiting Australia is surging. The country hosted 1.3 million Chinese tourists in the year ending September 2018, more than the population of Australia’s fifth-biggest city, Adelaide.

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Tourism Australia to persuade Indian LCCs to look at Australian opportunity










Tourism Australia will be engaging low-cost carriers (LCCs) in India and persuade them to look at opportunities of connecting cities in the Southern part of the country with mainland Australia. The nation’s tourism agency feels that improvement in point-to-point air connectivity can really boost outbound from India to Australia in a big way. The only direct air connection between India and Australia is currently serviced by Air India with 5 weekly frequencies between Delhi and Sydney, and 3 flights a week between Delhi and Melbourne.

In Delhi to attend the CAPA Aviation Summit, John O’Sullivan, Managing Director, Tourism Australia, told TravelBiz Monitorthat he had meetings with SpiceJet in this regard. “There is a great opportunity waiting to be captured for airlines,”he said, adding,“India is one of the fastest growing aviation markets in global terms with 17% growth. But we understand that there is lot more potential considering we only get just over 3.5 lakh tourists out of the total 25 million outbound travellers. The key to unlock that potential is direct connectivity.”

Sullivan said that hardly 11% of the air traffic between India and Australia is currently direct and rest is serviced through Singapore, Middle East, Hong Kong, mainland China, etc. He stated that Perth and Brisbane can be connected from gateway cities in South India like Chennai and Bengaluru with a flying time of six hours. “We want to put the opportunity before leading LCCs like IndiGo and SpiceJet, and it is up to them to decide. But we feel that they are quite excited and optimistic about it,” he informed. 
 
When asked about the prospects of Australian carriers opening India routes, Sullivan said that although they haven’t so far engaged with them, airline companies like Qantas which had previous stints in India and Virgin Australia understand the “importance of India” and might look at opportunities at some point of time.  

Sullivan said that Australia as a destination is only looking at tapping the “premium segment” of the travel market who “spend significantly” at the destination, visit often and has a predisposition to the experience on offer.He also said that Tourism Australia is also keen to attract large corporate incentive groups of the size ranging between 100 and 500 pax.  “Our strategy has found lot of success in other Asian markets.  We are looking for the same strategy in India as well,” he added. Sullivan said that they are also keen to promote Australia as wedding destination for India.  

As a source market, Tourism Australia has high hopes in India. Sullivan said that they believe that India has the potential to grow to the top three revenue generating markets in the near future. The Indian travel market is worth USD 1.6 billion currently, and Tourism Australia believes that it will grow to at least USD 3 billion worth market in terms of revenues by end of 2020. 

Tourism growth drives development boom in Australia

New hotel room supply in Sydney, Australia has driven declines in both occupancy, despite the increase in demand and hotel performance, according to a report from Horwath HTL Australia. 




Australia's hotel sector is in the middle of a rapid growth phase—reportedly the biggest since the lead-up to the Sydney Olympics in 2000.

According to Tourism Accommodation Australia, the uptick began three years ago, and more than 40 new hotels have been built across the country since then. A further 272 new hotels are in the pipeline for completion by the middle of next decade.

Tourism Accommodation Australia CEO Carol Giuseppi told local site ABC News the rapid expansion came down to investor confidence, thanks to growing demand, low interest rates and solid exchange rates for global investors.

Moreover, Giuseppi said the federal government had negotiated more than 100 bilateral air services agreements in recent years in a bid to bring in more inbound visitors, boosting the need for more hotel roms.

From 2000 to 2016, Melbourne and Sydney only got about 3,000 new guestrooms each as demand fell off following the summer Olympics in Sydney. But with the expected increase in inbound visitors, TAA is predicting another 11,600 rooms are due to be added to the Sydney market and more than 15,000 more in Melbourne by 2025.

TAA's "Innovation Revolution Transforming Australia's Hotel Industry" report shows the construction wave will see more than 45,000 new rooms added in Australia by 2025. But Gus Moors, head of hotels at Colliers International Australia, cautioned that some of those deals may fall through as the market fluctuates over the coming six years.

Is Australia Going to Introduce 33 Different Genders on Passports?

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