Sawyers Beach,around a 10-minute drive north of the main town,Whitemark on Flinders Island offers white sand,gin-clear water,lots of pretty boulders to clamber over or snorkel around and not another soul in sight.Credit:Tourism Tasmania
From coast to coast and top to tip,Lee Atkinson names five great Aussie beaches that you're likely to have all to yourself.
There are 10,685 beaches in Australia,at least according to the folk that spend their days counting these sorts of things at Sydney University's Coastal Studies Unit. Even if you take the really popular beaches,like Sydney's Bondi,Melbourne's St Kilda,Perth's Cottesloe,Adelaide's Glenelg and most of the Gold Coast out of the equation,along with all those on the well-worn tourist trail,like Wineglass Bay,Byron Bay,or Cable Beach,there's got to be still at least 10,000 or so that no-one really knows about. Here are five where you almost always have the sun,sand and surf to yourself.
1. Flinders Island,Tasmania
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You're pretty much guaranteed to find a deserted beach on Flinders Island,midway between Tasmania and Victoria on the eastern side of Bass Strait,even in the middle of the summer. After all,the locals have a golden rule when it comes to sharing their sandy shores:“if you find a beach with someone on it,find another one.” Easy to do when there's almost 100 glorious white sand beaches and less than 800 people on the island. One local woman,D'reen,tells me she even insists on finding a beach that is footprint free for her morning walk.
Despite its location straddling the 40th parallel in the middle of one of the most storm-wracked stretches of water,it's a surprisingly balmy place,even if it does get a little windy on occasion. As the locals like to boast,it's much warmer than Melbourne in the winter.
With so many stunning beaches on the island it's virtually impossible to single one out as being better than the rest,but if I was forced to choose,it would be Sawyers Beach,around a 10-minute drive north of the main town,Whitemark. Think white sand,gin-clear water,lots of pretty boulders to clamber over or snorkel around and not another soul in sight and you've got the picture.
More information:www.visitflindersisland.com.au
2. Point Sir Isaac,Eyre Peninsula,South Australia