Today,looking out at the ruins that remain of Victoria Settlement in the middle of absolutely nowhere,it all seems a ludicrous experiment.
Few visitors and plenty of fish in the waters of the coastal creeks and reefs and the Arafura Sea make this remote resort a prized destination.
Indigenous life has an incredibly long history in Arnhem Land,and it feels an absolute privilege to be given a glimpse of it.
The Garma Festival is an invitation to the clans to join in the diplomacy of kinship. It’s also a rare chance to engage with the world’s oldest living culture.
Why would anyone travel to the shark and croc infested waterways of the Cobourg Peninsula? There are plenty of reasons...
Unlike safaris in East Africa,here millions of birds,mammals,reptiles and amphibians can be seen by a maximum of 24 people – plus guides – at any one time.
The more than $2500 price tag of Arnhem Land’s exclusive Seven Spirit Bay gets you memories to last a lifetime.
East Arnhem Land is made up of hundreds of Indigenous communities and even though it stretches across 90,000 square kilometres,it is home to less than 20,000 people.
Nowhere gets wilder than this north-east edge of the Northern Territory.
An exploration of creative arts,nature and traditional life in Arnhem Land.