South Australia Natural Environment

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South Australia Climate 
Berri, South Australia, Australia
Blessed with a sunny climate, Berri is located in the Riverland, South Australia, two and a half hours drive from Adelaide and is an ideal location to spend time with family and loved ones, whether it be a short break or extended vacation.

Berri has floating wharf platforms for boat and houseboat mooring. A public marina (not suitable for houseboats) is also located on the Riverfront in Berri. Small boats can access Lake Bonney and Barmera.

You'll never be short of things to do… Find your own secluded place to admire the views and indulge in a gourmet picnic, complete with local wine and produce purchased earlier in the day at the cellar door and roadside stalls.

Take a leisurely walk through a national park, paddle a canoe in the backwaters or steer your houseboat into a bay. All of these places are alive with native wildlife for you to see.

Step back in time to follow in the steps of explorers, overlanders, pioneers and bushrangers at the many historical attractions, and appreciate the indigenous cultural heritage of the region.

If a more action packed itinerary appeals, a choice of water-skiing, swimming, sailing, canoeing, windsurfing, jet-skiing and fishing beckon. If land action is more your style, the district has a recreation centre, extensive playing fields, courts, bowling greens and golf courses.
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Coober Pedy, South Australia, Australia
Since I have no wish to spend too much time in Adelaide during the cycling convention, I made a last minute decision today to change coaches at Port Augusta and make a detour north to spend the day at Coober Pedy, which is where ninety-five percent of the world's opals are mined. The place is quite extraordinary - since the temperature can get as high as 110 degrees in the summer and below zero in the winter, the occupants have quite simply chosen to live under the ground where the climate doesn't affect them and it remains a constant 28 degrees. Today, apparently, it has been somewhere in the region of 100 degrees, and our coach captain, in an outburst of "telling it how it is" common to Australians, tells us that he believes anyone choosing to live in Coober Pedy to be a total nutter. Most of the occupants have dug out their own homes underground from scratch, cutting down into the hard Gypsum rock, and have created hidden mansions beyond the reach of the sun. They have television and electricity, and water comes in through a pipeline from an underground river twenty-seven kilometres away and is refined on site to allow hot and cold running water. The actual cost of digging such a home out of the rock is similar to that of buying a home overground although, of course, most of us would be quite annoyed if we paid for a new house and turned up to find a pile of bricks and a sheet of instructions telling us how to put it together ourselves. You really can have nothing but admiration for these people. We were taken on a tour of a local home, where the occupants were actually sitting in the living room watching television as we wandered through. From the outside, all we could see was the front door set into a mound of earth in the ground, but stepping inside is like crossing the threshold into another world. It's a little like living in a luxurious cave - the walls are hewn from the rock and lit by lamps set into carved out pillars. We entered the structure down a flight of steps, and to our right was a large living area which looked exactly like a normal living room except that the floor and walls were solid rock. Down the hall was a rock alcove containing a wine cupboard, and rough hewn stone steps led up in all directions to bedrooms of multicoloured Gypsum. Most surprisingly of all, we climbed a flight of steps at the back of the house and found ourselves standing on the edge of a full size underground swimming pool. This place was simply one of the most beautiful homes I've ever been in, and if it wasn't for the fact that it's miles from anywhere and that going outside is like stepping into a furnace, I couldn't imagine a more perfect place to live. Down the road was a complete underground church, with the altar and pews hewn out of rock. Coober Pedy has a school, a hospital with twenty beds but only one doctor, and a small street of shops. They now also have an open air cinema - and for those wishing to stay a while on the way North to Alice Springs, there is even a complete underground hotel where you can sleep, eat breakfast in the restaurant, browse the hotel shops, and drink in the bar without ever going above ground. Living here must be like living in an episode of "The Clangers". I took a tour of a local mine, since the opportunity was previously denied me in Mount Isa. Provided with hard hats and torches, our small band of travellers was led in single file down a narrow corridor which snaked it's way through the rock until I couldn't even imagine how far down we were. The passageway opened up into a large cavern where we were shown opal deposits and were able to stumble about in semi-darkness feeling claustrophobic before emerging into an opal shop where we were shown a demonstration of cutting and polishing and invited to part with large amounts of cash. Coober Pedy also has its surreal side, in case living underground isn't already surreal enough for you. There is a Golf course in the town but due to the obvious lack of grass the rules are slightly different. Each player has to carry around a square of Astroturf which they lay on the ground in order to have a grassy surface on which the place their ball for each stroke. They also have special balls which glow in the dark, so they can play at night when the temperature is bearable - so a game of Golf in Coober Pedy generally consists of going out at night with an illuminated ball and a square of grass and hitting the ball across a large area of jagged rocks in the hope that it won't be smashed to pieces after the first few strokes. Not surreal enough? Ok - try this one. At the top of the town is a tree - but no ordinary tree. The locals obviously missed the greenery of home so much that they wanted something to remind them what a tree looked like - so they've collected up all the scrap metal in town and welded one together. That's right; they've welded together a tree out of scrap metal. The sight of this would've probably had me rubbing my eyes in disbelief and thinking that the desert heat was getting to me, if it weren't for the fact that Australia is littered with these oddities - any road trip of the country, for example, will allow you to stop at a number of so-called "Big" things, a collection of nearly 150 roadside objects including "The Big Banana", "The Big Prawn" and "The Big Pineapple". This is Australia at its most surreal. So why would anyone go to such lengths to live in Coober Pedy, a town which sits in the middle of the burning desert and makes every attempt to roast you alive just for stepping outside your front door? The answer is simple - everyone here lives in the hope that they will one day hit a major opal field and strike it rich overnight. People flock in from all over the world to buy a plot, build a house and start digging, and a select few will go away millionaires. The reality, however, is that it costs so much to live and mine here that you would need to strike it lucky virtually every day just to stay alive - but it's like a form of gambling to the locals, and they don't seem to be able to imagine living any other way. If anyone did strike it rich, my guess would be that they'd just stay on and look for more.You can read my full travel journals at http://www.offexploring.com/globalwanderer and http://www.offexploring.com/globalwanderer2
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Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Whenever you visit an Australian city it's always worth checking out the local Botanic Gardens - all the cities seem to have them, they usually cover hundreds of acres of land, and the pride that seems to be taken in maintaining an area of beauty away from the city centre probably deserves an award. Adelaide's Botanic Gardens cover 120 acres, are almost next door to Adelaide Zoo, and contain a large lake by which you can sit and soak up the atmosphere even if you're not in the mood to wander. Every Australian city seems to create it's Botanic Gardens with a different purpose in mind, and the ones in Adelaide appear to be very much about relaxation - whereas the gardens in Brisbane, for example, were covered in woodland and animal habitats, Adelaide seems to be more about plants and flowers and wide open grassy spaces covered in horticultural displays. Rather than feeling as though you are actually walking through a woodland and experiencing a real return to nature, you move between conservatories showcasing different plant and flower species or wander through small gardens of carefully arranged flowers. I prefer the less organised and more natural feel of Brisbane where you can wander on a boardwalk along the reed beds by the river, watching things darting about in the water while surrounded by dense woodland. The main attraction of Adelaide's Botanic Gardens is the International Rose Garden - an area surrounding the Bicentennial Conservatory and showcasing nearly five thousand different types of rose. Pathways meander through the Rose Garden, which is divided into sections according to type, purpose and colour - one moment you can find yourself surrounded by sweet smelling red roses, the next you're looking at The Children's Rose or the Sir Cliff Richard Rose, or something equally bizarre. It seems that they have a Rose for every occasion here, and in the adjacent National Rose Trial Garden, the idea is to create a place where new varieties can be tested to see if they can stand the climate of Australia. I don't care how tough you think you are, you really do get swept away by the colour and the smell - at some point, the benches scattered around the garden draw you to them and you have to sit down, open a bottle of water and just surround yourself with colour and smell for half an hour before moving on.

You can read my full travel journals at http://www.offexploring.com/globalwanderer and http://www.offexploring.com/globalwanderer2
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