Introducing New South Wales
Brassy, bold, stately and old, New South Wales (NSW) hogs the lion’s share of Australia’s population, and it’s where the country’s modern society was birthed. It’s the most eclectic state and one of great contrasts; from the glitz of Sydney’s uberstyle bars and heart-breaking harbour, to the lunar landscapes in the south’s big empty. History echoes in the sandstone edifices and gracious old pubs speckled throughout small country towns, and alternative lifestyles lure New Age neophytes in the beguiling hinterland of the far north coast. Ski bunnies hit the slopes in the Snowy Mountains and surfers carve up the shoreline.
Mighty rivers quench the state’s dusty pockets and mighty mountains touch the sky. At the top of the Great Dividing Range, the misty rainforests of Washpool National Park are World Heritage listed. Gastronomes conquer appetites and vineyards in the Hunter Valley (although the latter is sometimes the victor). For every traveller, the journey is easy; family road trips are an institution on NSW highways, couples lose themselves in romantic hiding spots, backpackers do the coastal hop, and retirees tack caravans to their nether regions and take the slow route to wherever.
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Station sign 'Plain View' on the Mitchell Hwy, Nyngan.
- Oliver Strewe
- Lonely Planet photographer


















