logo
Your questions: What's the best way to travel around Sicily?

Your questions: What's the best way to travel around Sicily?

From here, an optional inclusion is Hangzhou, an 11-hour train ride. Hangzhou is one of China's most beautiful cities, sprawling across the banks of the Qiangtang River. A highlight is West Lake, where willow-lined banks, temples, pavilions and arched bridges backed by misty hills has fuelled the imaginations of painters and poets over generations.
Hangzhou is also the gateway to the Longjing Tea Plantations, source of dragon well tea, celebrated across China for its fragrance, flavour and elegance. Hangzhou has been a centre for the silk trade for thousands of years and the city maintains its historic connection with it via its lively silk market and the China National Silk Museum. The fastest trains from Hangzhou to Beijing take four and a half hours.
My husband and I finish a European river cruise in Budapest in the early European summer. We would like to see a little more of Hungary and then tour Romania. We are happy to join a small-group tour. Are there any companies you can recommend and must-see destinations?
J. Mulders, Menai, NSW
Apart from Budapest, the main sites to include in a tour of Hungary are Pecs for its early Christian Necropolis, its cathedral and its vibrant arts scene; the Tokaj Wine Region; Lake Balaton, the largest lake in Central Europe; Szentendre which is famous for its Baroque architecture, churches, colourful houses and narrow, cobbled streets, and Eger, which has a handsome medieval castle, thermal baths, Baroque buildings and the most northerly Ottoman minaret.
Most tour operators tend to lump Hungary together with Austria, the Czech Republic, Poland or all three. One of the few operators that offers tours of Hungary is JayWay Travel, which has a 12-day independent tour, with accommodation, transport and guides provided. In Romania the main drawcard is the Transylvania region, home to Saxon towns with fortified churches, Peles Palace, a neo-Renaissance castle built on the late 1800s by King Carol I and Sighisoara, the birthplace of Vlad Tepes, the inspiration for Count Dracula in Bram Stoker's novel. Here you can also see bears in the wild, and Romania has Europe's largest population of brown bears.
A longer journey would take you north into the rolling hills of Maramures, a rich rural tapestry of villages dominated by timber church spires and high pastures where enormous dogs guard flocks of sheep from wolves. To the east are the painted monasteries of the Bukovina region. To organise a tour of Romania, contact Diana Condrea of Uncover Romania.
I have been on an African safari and would love to take my adult children, their partners and one grandchild to Kenya and Tanzania for about two weeks. That's five adults plus one child. We are happy to stay in tented camps and a lodge or two. Is it possible to do it for about $40,000 excluding airfares?
J. Stewart, Turner, ACT
That sounds like a reasonable budget for your group. Sydney-based Bench Africa are the experts, they've been taking Australian travellers on African wildlife safaris for decades, and they can tailor a tour to fit your needs. Tent-based camping safaris are an excellent concept for family groups, offering immersion in the 'real' Africa, as well as a high level of comfort at a reasonable cost.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

European cities slap hefty fees on tourists - here's what it'll cost if you're caught wearing flip-flops
European cities slap hefty fees on tourists - here's what it'll cost if you're caught wearing flip-flops

Sky News AU

timea day ago

  • Sky News AU

European cities slap hefty fees on tourists - here's what it'll cost if you're caught wearing flip-flops

If you're vacationing in Europe this summer, better bring along extra cash. Popular tourist destinations in European cities are combating mass tourism by slapping some ridiculous, costly fines — some rising into the thousands — on visitors they deem unruly. Wearing flip-flops while driving, taking a shell or pebble from a beach and unbuckling your seatbelt before the plane stops taxiing can now cost you. Those who wear a bathing suit off the beach in the cities of Barcelona, Albufeira, Split, Sorrento, Cannes and Venice could face fines of up to $1,747, according to the BBC. In Mallorca, Ibiza, Magaluf and the Canary Islands, drinking alcohol on the street can set tourists back $3,495, and in Spain, leaving your towel to hold your pool chair for too long can cost $291. Spain, Greece, Italy, France and Portugal are the countries cracking down on those sporting flip-flops behind the wheel — and doling out $349 tickets for the crime. Greece is punishing those who make off with a shell or pebble by making them shell out $1,165 — and if you swim in a canal in Venice, be prepared to cough up $407. 'Locals are fed up,' tourism advocate Birgitta Spee-König told the outlet. 'These fines are signals that communities want to reclaim space. It's not that tourists are worse — it's more that the tolerance has gone. And it's important to consider that not every fine is a crackdown: Some are calls for respect.' Cities are even going so far as to launch marketing campaigns that outline what's against the law. A brand new 10-point Improve Your Stay campaign was introduced on buses and billboards in Malaga, Spain. Its signage details what the area expects of its guests — that they dress in a tasteful manner and avoid littering, making excessive noise and riding scooters recklessly, or risk an $873 fine. Albufeira also plastered signs in public spaces, explaining the fines for things tourists cannot do in public, like perform sexual acts, urinate, cook or even camp. Authorities are defending the stringent rules — which are being implemented by patrolling police — by saying they were set to protect locals, as well as respectful tourists who want to enjoy their vacation. 'The rules, while they might sound rigid and punitive when listed out, are all about encouraging responsible and empathetic traveling,' Jessica Harvey Taylor, head of press at the Spanish Tourism Office in London, told BBC. 'They are designed to protect the holiday experiences of the vast majority of people who behave responsibly on holiday.' Juan Antonio Amengual, mayor of Calvià, Mallorca, echoed the sentiment in a speech earlier this year. 'We must act with two main ideas in mind: the protection and preservation of the environment; and ensuring that tourism is in harmony with our society. 'Tourism cannot be a burden on citizens.' Originally published as European cities slap hefty fees on tourists - here's what it'll cost if you're caught wearing flip-flops

25 ways to eat, drink and explore Victoria's coolest coastal city
25 ways to eat, drink and explore Victoria's coolest coastal city

The Advertiser

time2 days ago

  • The Advertiser

25 ways to eat, drink and explore Victoria's coolest coastal city

25 ways to eat, drink and explore Victoria's coolest coastal city By Belinda Jackson Updated August 11 2025 - 4:18pm, first published 4:00pm An hour's drive from Melbourne - and just three weeks younger than the state capital - Victoria's second city has shed its "second fiddle" reputation. Subscribe now for unlimited access. or signup to continue reading All articles from our website The digital version of Today's Paper All other in your area European settlers surveyed Geelong - Djilang to the Wadawurrung people - in 1838. Arriving via the Princes Highway, you're greeted by reminders of its industrial roots: the red-brick 1915 Federal Wool Mills and the former 1920s Ford plant. In the city centre, grand woolstores and mills from its money-spinning past now hum with energetic new cafes, banging breweries and distilleries, browse-worthy galleries, and makers and vintage markets. Geelong waterfront. Picture: Tim Pescott Some things never change - Eastern Beach's art deco sea baths still draw crowds, and the waterfront remains perfect for both slow wanders and morning jogs. But in Australia's fastest-growing city, change is everywhere: the revamped Geelong Arts Centre now anchors the largest regional arts precinct in the country, a major convention centre opens next year, and the Spirit of Tasmania now calls Geelong home. Taking the plunge at Eastern Beach. Picture: Visit Geelong and the Bellarine So, before you jump on the freeway (or the ferry), here's how to make the most of Geelong and the Bellarine Peninsula. Eat and Drink Like a Local Jack Rabbit. Picture: Visit Geelong and the Bellarine Fine dining or casual bites Choose from one of the city's hatted restaurants, including the pared-down La Cachette Bistrot just off the waterfront, the Francophile haunt Bistrot Plume in Belmont, or Igni, with its sell-out set-course surprise menu. In the foodie enclave of Pakington Street, in West Geelong, you'll find the sustainably minded Tulip (not to mention Splatters, Australia's only sushi-train-style bar for cheese and charcuterie!) For a dash of history with your dinner, the 1915 restaurant is set in a century-old, red-brick boilerhouse in the Federal Mills precinct, with local gin distiller Anther distilling its juniper goodness next door - the Gibson martini comes highly recommended as an aperitif before dinner in 1915. 2. Little Malop Street cafe crawl Geelong's cafe scene is centred around Little Malop Street; so many cafes, so many different styles, from French country to industrial chic: where a moveable feast could see you get your fill of "evil" chicken wings, tacos, Greek loukoumades or ramen served with natural wines. Among it all, Geelong Cellar Door champions wines from the surrounding region and keeps an eye on global wine trends with its ever-changing guest wines. Geelong Cellar Door. The region is little pocket of cool-climate winery wonder, with more than 40 family-run cellar doors, and 150 vineyards in Geelong, the Bellarine Peninsula and further down on the Surf Coast. The pick of the bunch are its cool-climate chardonnays, pinot noirs and shiraz, and with its quiet, scenic roads, the region is ideal for a winery cycling tour. You'll find wineries in the most curious places: Fyansford Paper Mill is the home of Provenance wines - step inside to see murals by leading Australian street artist, Geelong-born RONE, while an upside-down house is the cellar door for Oakdene. Jack Rabbit wins points for not only its top-selling wines, but also the sweeping bay views, while a converted hayshed is the hub for Terindah Estate, and Austin Wines uses an old shearing shed to show its wines and collaboration with local Boom Gallery artists. Anther Gin. Geelong is also in the grip of gin fever, with a brace of distilleries in the city and surrounds, including the new Ceres distillery, which lights up the industrial area of Grovedale. Drop in for a taste, tour or even a masterclass, and pop in for a fresh beer at the neighbours, Blackman's Brewery. From the Sorrento-Queenscliff ferry, you can jump straight into the Queenscliff Distillery or the nearby Queenscliff Brewhouse. Otherwise, stay put and try five of the best at the Chamber of Gin, beside the National Wool Museum. Bollards on the bay. Follow 104 whimsical sculptures along the 4.4km trail from Limeburners Point to Rippleside Park, telling Geelong's story through lifesavers, footballers, musicians and more. Geelong is Australia's only UNESCO City of Design, so it's fitting that the Geelong Arts Centre is one of the largest regional art centres in Australia. It's located in the arts precinct between Little Malop and Ryrie streets. Walk through its concrete curtains to soak up comedy and circus, First Nations art and rockumentaries, Beethoven and ballet. On the opposite side of the street, the gracious Geelong Gallery is one of Australia's oldest galleries, dating from 1896, and its collection includes early European depictions of Geelong from painters such as Eugene von Guerard and Frederick McCubbin. Geelong Arts Centre. Admirers of 19th-century industrial architecture are spoilt for choice as Geelong celebrates its history as Australia's premier wool hub. Visitors flock (sorry!) to the National Wool Museum, a bluestone - possibly haunted - woolstore, which opened with a banquet for 200 people in 1872. Here, you'll find not only the history of wool, but stories dating back 60,000 years ago to the first living cultures in the region. The centrepiece is the 113-year-old Axminster rug loom, still in use today, the Reminiscence Cottage, a sensory experience of Australian homes between 1930 and 1960 for people living with dementia. The museum is also the only venue to show the annual Wildlife Photographer of the Year exhibition, on loan every year from London's Natural History Museum. While woolsheds are the lynchpin of its city centre, the old paper mill of Fyansford village, on the edge of the city, is now a haven of design-led businesses including a gallery cafe and artist workspaces, and the Portarlington flour mill - built in the 1850s using local sandstone - is preserved by the National Trust. Terindah Estate. For more history that shaped the nation, take a tour of the bluestone Barwon Park Mansion, in Winchelsea, built in 1871 by pastoralist Thomas Austin to entertain the Duke of Edinburgh. Austin will be remembered as the man who, in 1859, brought 24 rabbits from England for hunting game, subsequently establishing one of Australia's worst, introduced pests. His wife, Elizabeth, was far more civic-minded, establishing the forerunner of the Austin Hospital, in Heidelberg. Eastern Beach fountain. Early morning in Geelong sees its waterfront busy with dog walkers and joggers, cyclists and those appreciating a wake-up walk to a soundtrack of seabirds' voices on the breeze and the chime of rigging of the yachts moored along Corio Bay. Easy and super-scenic, the Wangim Walk is a winner; an overwater walk into Corio Bay on a series of pontoons from Steampacket Gardens. At just 440 metres each way, it's a smooth roll for wheelchairs and prams. From the furthest point, look back to Cunningham Pier to the right, and the Royal Geelong Yacht Club marina and Giant Sky Wheel on Eastern Beach to the left. Eastern Beach is Geelong's main spot to take a dip in Corio Bay, with its art deco kiosk, barbecues, cafes and safe enclosure. For a local secret, take a dip at North Shore beach, or go further afield onto the Bellarine Peninsula, for the family-friendly waters of Portarlington Beach and Torquay's front beach. In summer, kids - big and small - can ride a tsunami or a tornado at the popular Adventure Park waterpark, 25 minutes from the centre of Geelong. Waterpark fun. Take a spin along the sealed paths of the 20-kilometre Barwon River Trail between pretty Fyansford and South Geelong, stopping at the serene, historic Buckley Falls for a breather and bird-watching. The six-kilometre-return Bay Trail runs the length of Corio Bay following the Baywalk Bollards, with waterfront views all the way, but to stretch your legs, follow the old railway line on the 35-kilometre Bellarine Rail Trail, from South Geelong through farmlands until you reach the sea at Queenscliff. Don't want to stop? Jump on the ferry and continue your two-wheeled adventure on the Mornington Peninsula. Cunningham Pier. Picture: Moby Dick 14. Electric boat picnics Hire an easy-to-drive Go Boat, for a floating picnic with friends (dogs welcome). No boat licence is needed to hire the boats from as little as one hour, departing from Wangim Walk. One of the world's oldest football clubs is the AFL's Geelong Cats, formed in 1859. The 2022 premiers play at their home ground of Kardinia Park, home to the city's largest stadium. The Federal Mills precinct houses the permanent vintage market, while every town has at least one monthly farmers market, night market, ethical market or community market to stock up on plants, produce, crafts and curios. The long-stayer of Geelong's hotel scene is the Novotel Geelong, in the centre of Geelong's waterfront, on Eastern Beach Road opposite Steampacket Gardens, with an Americana seafood-grill bent to its waterfront restaurant and a focus on produce drawn from a 60-kilometre radius. Other choices include the centrally located Rydges Geelong, the 128-room, dog-friendly R Hotel Geelong and Vue Apartments, opposite Eastern Beach. Newer hotels include the new 180-room Holiday Inn opposite the Geelong Arts Centre, close to the cafe-filled Little Malop Street and Quest Gheringhap Street. The Bellarine Peninsula yields cosy cabins and hidden B&Bs in its towns and villages, including The Woods' bush cabins just outside Ocean Grove and stylish self-contained pods with outdoor deck baths at The Nest in Point Lonsdale. Putting the putt into the weekend, the Curlewis Clubhouse sits on one of the region's best golf courses in Portarlington, with signature French restaurant Claribeaux. Otherwise, soak up the wines with a stay in McGlashan's Wallington Estate eco villas, 25 minutes' drive from central Geelong, and pay a visit to Farm Dog Brewing, where the next generation of McGlashans is brewing craft beer and boutique gins. If you love a good glamp, 20 new tents have cropped up on the grounds of Bellarine Estate winery, 25 minutes from Geelong, where the Kenny family's established cellar door is complemented by a Texan-inspired smokehouse restaurant and another newcomer, the Thirty Acres gin distillery. Surfing at Ocean Grove. The Bellarine peninsula is Geelong's coastal playground. Less famous than its sister, the Mornington Peninsula, on the other side of Port Phillip Bay, the Bellarine's charms are as plentiful, but without the rush. The two peninsulas are connected by the Searoad ferries, which run between Sorrento and Queenscliff, where the ferry terminal is a destination in its own right, with the new waterfront Tarra restaurant serving all-day meals. From bar at the Portarlington Grand. Train lovers, jump straight from ferry onto the hugely popular Q Train, a rolling restaurant that runs between Drysdale and Queenscliff, serving degustation menus that showcase the food, wines and spirits of Geelong, the Bellarine and Otways. Otherwise, book the Blues Train, which grooves its way around the Bellarine several times a month from Queenscliff railway station for a night of music and food, dancing and drinks, with four acts performing on the moving train. 21. Bellarine Taste Trail Follow the Bellarine Taste Trail, with nearly 50 food and wine stops, from farmgates to provedores on the peninsula. You could even pair it with an e-bike tour, merging food and fitness. Portarlington Mussel Tours take guests out in the Sea Bounty, a 40-year-old Huon pine trawler, to discover the bay's beloved bivalves. Get your hands on the ropes to pull up the mussels, and then enjoy a feast cooked up on the boat, with local olives, smokehouse dips, and wines and gins from the region. Bellarine Estate. Established in 1888, the refurbished Portarlington Grand Hotel has 18 rooms including its Bay rooms, whose balconies let you watch the changing moods of Port Phillip Bay. Balancing its grand staircases and high ceilings, the Grand is still a casual and fun pub for locals, with Portarlington mussels and local wines on the menu. Tapping into the rich mineral waters of ancient aquifers, The Lon Retreat is a family-run, European-style house hotel with just seven suites on its 80-hectare property in Point Lonsdale, with a luxurious day spa that incorporates mineral bathing into its treatments. 24. Surf or swim with seals There's no better place to learn to surf than on the gentle waves of the Bellarine Peninsula, with surf schools in all the coastal towns from Ocean Grove to Thirteenth Beach at Barwon Heads and Torquay, or watch the pros at work on the renowned waves of Bells Beach. But there's a different reason to don a wetsuit at Queenscliff, where you can swim with Australian fur seals and dolphins. Belinda Jackson was a guest of the Novotel Geelong and Lon Retreat

Em Rata on her hot girl summer in racy bikini shoot
Em Rata on her hot girl summer in racy bikini shoot

Perth Now

time2 days ago

  • Perth Now

Em Rata on her hot girl summer in racy bikini shoot

Emily Ratajkowski has been soaking up the European sunshine on luxury yachts and posing up a storm in tiny bikinis that only just cover her modesty. The 34-year-old US model and author took to Instagram at the weekend to share a series of photos from her travels in Italy with loved ones, including her son Sly. The first photo in her post was sure to capture attention as the influencer showed off her figure in a barely-there leopard print bikini while standing on the edge of her villa's infinity pool that looked out to scenic, cliff-side views. In another photo, Rata wore a different tiny red and blue striped bikini paired with matching hot pants as she enjoyed a yacht day swimming and snorkelling. She continued her swimsuit parade with a selfie that showed off the front of her plunging leopard print bikini, which she accessorised with dainty gold chain necklaces, Gucci sunglasses and a baseball cap. Other images showed Rata enjoying a yacht cruise, feasting on seafood and diving into pretty blue waters. Friends and fans took to the comments section and hyped up the London-born, California-raised star. 'You're so hot,' one fan said. Another added: 'A gorgeous little piece of perfection.' 'These outstanding pictures go beyond the word beautiful, just mesmerising, especially the opening one of you Em with you're body posed like a life-like temple,' a third fan added. Em Rata stayed at a historic villa in Positano, situated on a beautiful hill of the Amalfi Coast. Credit: Supplied The photo dump comes shortly after Rata was spotted showing PDA with former lover and entrepreneur Orazio Rispo while swimming off the Amalfi Coast. While the model recently told Elle UK in June that 'straight men' are not a part of her inner circle, it appears the pair rekindled their romance after they were previously seen kissing in 2022. In other news, Rata is set to make her screenwriting debut for a new Apple TV+ series that explores female identity and early motherhood alongside Lena Dunham.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store