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Great-Barrier-Reef Travel Guide

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Three times the size of Texas, with a population that clings to the coast but embraces the Outback for its icons, Queensland is a sprawling amalgam of stunning scenery, fantastic yarns, and eccentric personalities. Its most famous attraction is the Great Barrier Reef -- by no means the only thing worth seeing. Great beaches and tropical weather make it hard to decide where to go first, and for how long.

White sandy beaches grace almost the entire Queensland coastline, and a string of lovely islands and coral atolls dangles just offshore. At the southern end of the state, Gold Coast beaches and theme parks keep tourists happy. In the north, from Townsville to Cape York, the rainforest teems with exotic flora and fauna.

Brisbane is the state capital, a former penal colony that today brims with style. While Brisbane boasts world-class theater, shopping, markets, art galleries, and restaurants, it retains the relaxed warmth of a country town.

Less than an hour's drive south of Brisbane is the Gold Coast "glitter strip," with its 35km (22 miles) of rolling surf and sandy beaches. North of Brisbane lies the aptly named Sunshine Coast -- more white sandy beaches, crystal-clear waters, and rolling mountains dotted with villages.

Don't miss the wild beauty of the largest sand island in the world, World Heritage-listed Fraser Island. Each year from August to October, humpback whales frolic in the sheltered waters between Fraser Island and Hervey Bay -- if you're in the area at this time, you won't want to miss the opportunity to experience the whales firsthand.

As you travel north, you'll be tempted by one tropical island after another until you hit the cluster of 74 that makes up the Whitsunday and Cumberland groups.

Then you enter a land where islands, rainforest, mountains, and rivers unite. Green sugar-cane fields are everywhere -- Mackay is the largest sugar-producing region in Australia. This attractive city has its own beach, and the harbor is a departure point for cruises to the Great Barrier Reef and the Whitsunday Islands. The Whitsundays are on the same latitude as Tahiti, and for my money are equally lovely. The idyllic island group is laced with coral reefs rising out of calm, blue waters teeming with colorful fish -- warm enough for swimming year-round.

North of the Whitsundays are Dunk Island and the rainforest settlement of Mission Beach -- a perfect illustration of the contrasts in the region known as Tropical North Queensland. The port city of Townsville boasts 320 days of sunshine a year and marks the start of the Great Green Way -- an area of lush natural beauty on the way to Cairns.

Then you come to Cairns, with rainforest hills and villages to explore and a harbor full of boats waiting to take you to the Reef.

Cairns is a good base, but savvy travelers head an hour north to the trendy village of Port Douglas.

©2005, Wiley Publishing, Inc.

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