Skip to content

How a good Australian hotel can help make a good Australian holiday

by Admin on June 12th, 2010

There is something special about an Australian holiday, because Australia has such a wide variety of fascinating places to visit. Take Monkey Mia, for instance.

 

Monkey Mia can be found about 850km north of Perth. This World famous beach is where welcoming dolphins swim to the beach to interact with excited humans. Monkey Mia, on Australias Coral Coast, is adjacent to a immense number of exclusive attractions unparalleled anywhere else in the World.
  
Monkey Mias population was never large; settlement was hindered by the lack of rain and water. Until recently, water was obtained from a nearby desalination plant at Denham, the main township located 26km southwest on the opposite side of the Peron Peninsula.

The dolphins fascinate thousands of enthusiasts each year; marine biologists visit Monkey Mia to study the friendly dolphins in their natural surroundings and people come from all over the World to experience nature in the raw. The small group of dolphins that come into shore are part of a much larger pod of 300 that live further out to sea. These beautiful bottlenose dolphins come of their own free will to interrelate with people on a daily basis.

Dolphins seem to have a Worldwide appeal, everybody adores these loveable gentle animals, and surely it is everybody’s pipe dream to actually swim with them, touch them and play with them. So come and indulge your dream and frolic with the dolphins of Monkey Mia.

 

In 1990, the waters surrounding Monkey Mia were officially acknowledged a marine park and in 2001, the Monkey Mia Visitors Centre was opened by the Western Australian Government department of Conservation and Land Management CALM.

If this doesn’t appeal, how about some Australian travel, or Australia tours, or Noosa accommodation just to make some other suggestions.

From → Articles

No comments yet

Leave a Reply

Note: XHTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to this comment feed via RSS