 I was trawling the web looking for articles I thought our Transfercar drivers would be interested in and found this little beauty. Not only does it contain invaluable advise about travelling in the outback of Australia,  it’s a really good read!
I was trawling the web looking for articles I thought our Transfercar drivers would be interested in and found this little beauty. Not only does it contain invaluable advise about travelling in the outback of Australia,  it’s a really good read!
SURVIVING AUSTRALIA’S OUTBACK
About            three o’clock in the morning something woke me, and I lay listening.            A strange rumbling came from somewhere out in the night. “Are you            awake?” Cristi whispered softly. I whispered back that I was. “There’s            something outside,” she said.
The northern Australia night was stifling. Beneath our flimsy tent we            had gone to sleep in the coolest possible costumes – nothing at all.            Now I got to my feet and tiptoed to the entrance to the tent. Gently            I pulled open the flaps an inch apart and peered out. It was pitch black,            and I could see nothing. I parted the tent flaps a bit more. There,            not twenty feet from the tent, was a large crocodile.
By now Cristi was up and standing next to me. We stood there, stone-like,            with nothing but a thin sheet of canvas between us and a twenty-foot            crocodile.
The rumbling continued. It came from the crocodile’s stomach. It was            tearing up the food we had left away from the campsite. It was a lesson            of the Outback that I was happy to have learned: don’t store your food            near your campsite.
Slowly it worked its way through the food, ripping apart a barbecued            chicken with uncomfortable ease. Then it scurried away, toward the Herbert            River, silhouetted against the horizon, immense, its red eyes gleaming            in the moonlight. Finally it left, and as we went back to bed, I recalled            a sign we had seen along the roadside earlier in the day. It warned            travelers succinctly: “Beware of Crocodiles.”
Read the full story thanks to hackwriters.com.

 If you’re planning on travelling to Australia this summer, and taking our free
If you’re planning on travelling to Australia this summer, and taking our free  “What’s ours is yours” is the latest advertising campaign currently running across the ditch in a bid to entice Australian holiday makers.
“What’s ours is yours” is the latest advertising campaign currently running across the ditch in a bid to entice Australian holiday makers.
 The first thing is to find a relocation car at
The first thing is to find a relocation car at