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Destinations / Fraser Island

Fraser Island

Overview

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Fraser is the original four-wheel-drive island. Located just off Australia's Queensland coast, this isle of sand is about 75 miles long, and the eastern shoreline is basically one long beach - and the main highway for vacationers (including legions of surf fishermen) arriving by car ferry in their 4-WDs.

A World Heritage site, the island is not only the world's largest sand island, but also the only place where a rainforest grows out of sand. The outdoor life is the main attraction on Fraser. Hikers can follow a network of walking trails in the southern half of the island, some of them leading to a collection of incredible freshwater, sand dune lakes - McKenzie, Birrabeen, and Boonmanjin among them - where the waters range from tannin-stained red to the clearest blues imaginable.

It's a place where you can drive on the beach, watch migrating humpback whales and their calves relaxing in Platypus Bay, take long horseback rides, camp, cook fresh-caught fish on the barbecue, and look at the night sky ... in other words, a great Aussie holiday.

Plan your trip

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BEACHES

OK, you've got a 75-mile-long beach to choose where to pitch your beach towel, but if you're looking for the best stretches of white sand on the world's largest sand island, head inland. The beaches around the island's lakes, notably Lake McKenzie and Lake Birrabeen, are Fraser's finest. (McKenzie's beach has been ranked among Australia's best.)

FISHING

Surf-fishing, particularly along the northern part of Seventy-Five Mile Beach, has been a favorite pastime for decades. It's here, from about July through October, when tailors (a bit like a kingfish) run in vast numbers, some reaching 25 to 30 pounds. Bring the barbie...

NATURE

You won't see any kangaroos on the island, but along with some familiar friends (wallabies and flying foxes) and birds (about 230 species, from rainbow lorikeets to rare ground parrots), you'll probably spot some of Fraser's dingos - which are considered some of the purest wild dogs in all of Australia (thanks in large part to being isolated on an island).

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