It’s time to say goodbye to the Outback. Next stop: Sydney, the biggest city in Australia! You take the free transfer from the hotel to the airport. The departures are adapted to fit in with the flight departures – ask at your hotel when the bus departs.
Upon arrival in Sydney, you’ll notice the differences between Melbourne and Sydney right away. Sydney’s wide streets, which lead you down to the Opera House, stand in stark contrast to the narrow, graffiti-adorned laneways of Melbourne. Sydney is – if you ask us – one of the world’s most scenically situated cities. You be the judge.
The city is built up around the world’s largest natural harbour, and with access to more than 100 different beaches, it’s very much an outdoor lifestyle here in the city!
On this first day, most people head down to Sydney Opera House and Sydney Harbour Bridge. Sydney Opera House has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2007, along with the Egyptian pyramids and the Great Wall of China. Right next to the Opera House is the Botanic Garden. From here, you have a view of the harbour with ferries sailing back and forth between the suburbs, and large yachts bobbing in the many bays.
Opposite the Opera House is the old quarter, The Rocks. This is where the first Europeans settled when they arrived in Sydney.
If you continue round the harbour front, you come to Barangaroo Reserve. The area is a former industrial site that, with the help and guidance of the Aboriginal people, has been transformed into an area of parkland that resembles a little piece of Sydney as it was before the Europeans settled. You might like to join a guided tour and learn more about the unique flora found there, and the cultural heritage of the Aboriginal people.
Round off the day at King Street Wharf, where you’ll find some of the city’s best restaurants.