A-list ... Ferraris hug the Sea Cliff Bridge.
Lenny Ann Low turns heads on a high-octane drive along country lanes and coastal cliffs.
The most amazing thing about hiring a Ferrari F430 Spider on a sunny afternoon and whisking through the countryside is not its speed,livery,reputation or staggering price tag. It's that the rental company has actually allowed me behind the wheel.
A first-time driver of the supercar,I am roaring along with a fleet of red Ferraris on one of Prancing Horse's chaperoned"drive days":a two-day round trip from Sydney to Gerringong on the South Coast. In front of me are a 2002 360 Spider,a 1998 F355 Spider and a 1988 328 GTS.
If,like me,these car names mean little more to you than jumbled numbers and letters,try to imagine the following:three low,wide and impossibly sleek convertibles and a coupe in racing red,all reeking of Italian style and all banishing thoughts of practicality,demureness and frugality.
Ferraris are the cars of film stars,formula one drivers,footballers and financiers (global financial crisis permitting). Tom Selleck threw one around in the 1980s television series. and such notable Ferrari lovers as David Beckham,Steve McQueen,Brigitte Bardot and Miles Davis have fallen for the Italian stallion.
The long,low and undulating body design demands the driver get in and out as if negotiating a lilo but,once inside and sitting low to the ground,it's akin to manning a rocket.
We rumble through the Royal National Park,then burst out beside a glittering ocean and panoramic views at Bald Hill lookout at Stanwell Tops. I have never driven an expensive fast car but their appeal is beginning to make sense.
With Prancing Horse director Walter Szyszka leading the convoy,we snake over undulating coastal and country roads with a manoeuvrability and ease that,not three hours before,had seemed impossible to this first-time Ferrari driver.
The trip starts at Prancing Horse's Marrickville headquarters,where we meet the Ferraris. Like encountering a celebrity,I worry about acting normally in their company. Surely I'll make a fool of myself behind the wheel. Szyszka,operations manager Robert Felato and race engineer Matt Thio give a short briefing about the cars,requesting affably that we stay together on the road,obey the speed limit and not overtake the lead car.