Showing posts with label Tourism information. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tourism information. Show all posts

Friday, 19 June 2015

Travel guide for Australian travellers

EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT
After a shaky start as settlers adapted to an unfamiliar land, the settlement at Sydney Cove grew rapidly in the early years of the nineteenth century, as thousands of free settlers took advantage of land grants and promised riches. Britain's stringent inheritance laws, under which firstborn sons claimed all land titles, led second and later sons in particular to the chance to strike out for themselves in this land of opportunity. Adelaide, in 1836, and Melbourne, in 1837, was settled by just such opportunists. Transportation of convicts ended in 1864. It is estimated that around 1, 60,000 convicts were sent to Australia over 76 years, most of who stayed on once they were freed.
While the number of convicts was insignificant when compared to the free settlers who streamed into Australia in the latter half of the nineteenth century-attracted by gold, cheap land, and the promise of a new life-convict labor played a major role in building Australia's nascent cities. Strict inheritance laws saw that land in Britain was passed from father to eldest son, and could not be subdivided. Younger sons traditionally entered the clergy or the military.
The promise of generous land grants in New South Wales drew the younger sons of England's wealthy to emigrate and establish stock stations of a magnitude they could never have imagined back home many of which still exist today. As freed convicts joined the increasing number of settlers attracted to the promise of this burgeoning southern land (where labor was in great demand), many began to appreciate that they were better off than if had they stayed in an overcrowded and recently industrialized England. Together, these disparate colonials and their children battled hosThe environments to establish an indigenous culture based on solidarity and a distaste for authority.
BOOM AND BUST
The colonies experienced a major boost to their economies when gold was found, first in New South Wales in 1851 and then in prodigious quantities in Victoria. The ensuing gold rush had a dramatic effect, as men left the land and crews jumped ship to seek riches on the gold fields. Fortune-seekers arriving in overcrowded ships came from all corners of the globe.
 At its peak during the year 1852, over 86,000 people arrived from England a lone. Untamed shanty towns were populated by men who worked hard during the day and at night dreamed of great fortunes, as they sat around the campfires or huddled in pubs to discuss their day with the other diggers. During this period, colonial Australia's first "heroes" were born bushrangers, who were admired for challenging authority.
The term was coined in 1805 to describe escaped convicts who had turned to robbery to survive in the bush. Many poor farmers and laborers also tried their hand at bush ranging. Some with colorful sobriquets such as "Yankee" Jack Ellis, Captain Moonlight and "Mad Dog" Morgan became household names, while songs celebrating their exploits became popular.


The best known bushranger was Ned Kelly who, after his mother was wrongfully arrested, ambushed and killed three troopers. Outlawed in 1878, he and his gang held up banks and successfully evaded the police for two years. Ned Kelly was finally trapped in Clenrowan in June, 1880, where he defied the police, protecting himself with homemade armor. Realizing that they could not penetrate his plough-share mask they shot at his feet, which were unprotected. Captured, Kelly was sentenced to death and hanged in Melbourne on November 11, 1880. His last words were: "Such is life." The prosperity that gold brought to Australia accelerated the country's development. Roads and railway lines were laid down, linking the colonies and creating a new-found confidence around the nation. People began talking about an Australian identity that incorporated the ideas born in the gold fields of mate ship and egalitarianism. A sense was developing that Australia, rather than Britain, was now home.

Monday, 16 February 2015

Sydney Travel information for Travelers - Travel packages- Tourism information-hotel bookings-Restaurents


Britain later decided to establish a penal colony in New Holland, as Australia was then known, Cook proposed Botany Bay as an ideal site. But on arriving with the First Fleet in 1788, Captain Arthur Phillip was apparently not convinced of Cook's choice. The fleet waited six days while Phillip explored the surrounding coastline, until finally, on January 26, 1788, he declared Port Jackson to be "the finest harbor in the world" and sailed the fleet through its headlands.

Once ashore, Phillip raised the Union Jack and proclaimed the Colony of New South Wales in the name of King George, and him- self Governor of it. Phillip established his colony on lands controlled by Yura (alternatively spelt Eora or lora) clans - some of the rock carvings in Sydney are over 40,000 years old. Although he endorsed a policy of non-violence towards the Aborigines, the settlers cleared the Yura's forests, restricted their access to traditional hunting and fishing grounds, and even pilfered their fishing nets and baskets and eventually their women.

Retaliation was inevitable. Isolated attacks were prevented from escalating into full-blown warfare by a smallpox epidemic in'1789, which almost annihilated the Aboriginal population (influenza, pneumonia and tuberculosis added to the devastation). Guerrilla attacks continued, though, led by angered warriors like Pemulway, who speared the Governor's game- keeper in 1790 and fought against the New South Wales Corps until he was killed in 1802. Although Britain continued to transport convicts to Sydney until 1840, the colony's steady growth owed more to land grants and other schemes that attracted thousands of free settlers. 

Convicts provided the necessary labor (just below convicts on the social scale, young Aborigines were employed as servants and farmhands). Pioneers built homesteads up and down the coast, and in 1813, a track was finally cleared through the Blue Mountains, opening up the fertile plains to the west.

In 1850-1851, the news of sizeable nuggets of gold found near Bathurst changed the face of the new colony. Fortune-seekers the world over set sail for Sydney Harbor. Sydney's population doubled over the next 10 years.

GENERAL INFORMATION

 Sydney's main tourist information office is the Sydney Visitor Centre  106 George Street, The Rocks, open 9 AM to 6 PM daily; it's often referred to by its former name, The Rocks Visitor Centre.

The CityRail network operates between 4:30 AM and midnight. Lines are color-coded. They also have trains to the Blue Mountains and Hunter Valley. For other rail or bus travel, you'll need Countrylink C 132232. Curving above the Sydney city center, the futuristic 3.6-km (2.2-mile) Monorail C (02) 95522288 links a number of sights, including the Sydney Aquarium and the Powerhouse Museum. It offers good views of the harbor. Locals tend to disparage it, but the ride is pretty cool.
Tickets cost $2.50, a day pass $6. 

Displays at most bus stops provide timetable information, and Nightrider services take over from midnight. Night buses have radio links to taxi companies, so you can arrange for a cab to meet you at your destination. Bright green and yellow Air- port Express buses run every 10 minutes between 7 AM and 7:30 PM on weekdays, less often at other times. Route 300 runs from Circular Quay via George Street, Town Hall and Sydney Central stations, route 350 from Kings Cross via Oxford Street.


Star City Casino operates a covey of free shuttle buses throughout Sydney so that punters can hang onto their cash until they get there - the casino is conveniently located at Darling Harbor, so make use of the free ride. Ask if one runs nearby. It's usually easy enough to flag down a taxi in Sydney, and there are cab ranks outside most train stations and wharves. The 20-minute drive from central Sydney to the airport will cost around $20 unless it's peak hour when you can double that. Be sure to tell the driver clearly whether you're going to the domestic or the international terminal; the free shuttle service connecting the terminals takes 20 minutes.