Everything to know about the East MacDonnell Ranges

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Before heading off on the iconic Larapinta Trail through Central Australia’s West MacDonnell Ranges, we pivot 180 degrees to venture where mostly only locals roam. Welcome to the East MacDonnell Ranges.

The East MacDonnell Ranges, not as well known as the West MacDonnell Ranges, provide incredibly beautiful scenery for bush walking, camping and four-wheel-driving.

Getting there

The East MacDonnell Ranges can be found for 150km just east of Alice Springs.

 

QantasLink and Virgin Australia fly direct to Alice Springs from most capital cities.

Staying there

Hale River Homestead

Stay in the heart of the East MacDonnell Ranges at Hale River Homestead, accessible by 2WD; from $30 per night for an unpowered site to $240 (two adults) in the Homestead.

Squeaky Windmill

Back in Alice Springs, Squeaky Windmill has boutique glamping complete with heating, bathrobes, and marshmallows to roast over the fire. From $175 per night for two people.

Best time to go

Experience the East Macs between May and September when days are warm and dry. Summer is too hot for hiking but perfect for the magnesium pool at Hale River Homestead.

What to pack

You’ll want a 4WD or trusty tour guide to get you there, and then short walks are the best way to experience the gorges and nature parks of the East MacDonnell Ranges.

 

Take sturdy walking boots, plenty of layers for morning and evening and expect to rug up at night when temperatures drop. A hat, sunscreen and water bottle are other backpack essentials.

Why?

Trephina Gorge

I’m completely surrounded by sheer red and purple quartzite rock faces and ghost gums looking as if they’ve been caught exposed, their bare white trunks glowing for all to see. The ground is coated in deceptively downy-looking spinifex but I carefully step in Filippo’s footsteps underneath an impossibly blue sky. So far today i’ve seen only two other humans.

Deceptively downy spinifex typifies the iron-red landscape

I’m in Trephina Gorge, a little-known nature park 85 kilometres east of Alice Springs where russet strata, blue mallee and sandy creek beds bring the colours of the desert into vivid detail. This area is significant to the Eastern Arrernte Aboriginal people because it is part of the Wallaby Dreaming Trail, and was also once part of the early settlement of Central Australia.

 

We may be close to the geographical centre of Australia, but we’re not going without good, strong Italian coffee this morning. Bucking the trend of almost every tour I’ve come across, my new friend Filippo Gelado from Outback Elite Tours pulls a gas burner and Italian-style moka pot out of his backpack after our hike as naturally as one would expect a thermos and packet of Monte Carlos. He’s made rock cakes studded with sultanas, too. God bless the Italians.

 

When I mentioned to a few locals in Alice that I was heading for the East MacDonnell Ranges, they were suitably impressed. “Oh, good on you, no one goes out there," astronomy enthusiast Tom Falzon from Earth Sanctuary said of my plan. “That’s a real local’s spot."

 

So why go east when everyone is heading west?

 

Standing in awe at the base of the largest ghost gum (Corymbia aparrerinja) in Australia, I believe it’s for moments like this. Standing sentinel inside Trephina Gorge, this 33-metre giant is estimated to be over 300 years old.

Staggering red and purple quartzite rock formations stand in contrast to glowing white ghost gums in Trephina Gorge

Filippo has designed a highlights reel of sights for me today on a private tour. Though he’s a long way from home – having grown up in a small village outside Milan – you’d swear he was born with red dirt in his blood, even when he admits he’d never even been camping before backpacking through Australia with his then-girlfriend, now-wife in 2011.

 

“The idea of camping we have in Italy is a crowded place," he explains. “It’s the cheapest accommodation you can have, full of kids. It didn’t make sense to me then.

 

“I’d never slept in a tent before and we came here and spent six months just camping."

 

I’m quickly discovering the true beauty of the Red Centre is in its isolation – the wide open spaces with no one to share them with – that inspires travellers to wander this way.

 

“Sometimes people don’t really want to stay in a crowd; they come to the outback with the ‘outback’ idea, like ‘I don’t want to see anyone’," Filippo says.

 

While the mountainous spines of the West MacDonnell Ranges are cradled by a well-managed national park and served by tour buses, the East Macs take a little more local know-how
to conquer. Nature parks and significant rock art sites are interspersed with sprawling cattle stations and private land.

The caterpillar dreaming told through ochre rock art inside Emily Gap

Arltunga

Perhaps the most obvious difference on this side of the ranges, I’ll later come to realise, is the ghost town of Arltunga where Central Australia experienced its first gold rush in the late 1800s. At its height, Arltunga supported a population of 3000 people, many of whom worked and lived in extreme conditions in the small, remote settlement, battling stupefying heats with little water or fresh food.

The skeleton past of Arltunga

Walking through the preserved ruins of the police station, gaol and government works buildings today, it’s hard to fathom just how remote and tough this place would have been 130 years ago.

Hale River Homestead

Half an hour’s drive away, we cross the cattle grid and pull into Hale River Homestead at the Old Ambalindum Station. The station played its own role in Arltunga’s history, with Irish prospector Frederick Cavenagh – who worked as a clerk in the government works – taking on the lease to raise sheep and grow vegetables, partnering with neighbouring station Clareville to supply sustenance to miners.

The retro caravan of Hale River Homestead doubles as a School of the Air classroom

Today, the Leigh family own Hale River Homestead – a “veggie patch" in terms of its size at a mere 60 square kilometres, as Filippo puts it – which makes a welcome stopover for travellers on the infamous Binns Track, as well as an attractive day trip for Alice Springs locals who come to cool off in the magnesium pool during summer. Essentially a shipping container with a deck, the pool has five-star views, looking out over a windmill and the heritage-listed ruins of the station’s original shearing shed, which will be restored in the future.

 

“The beauty of the east is you’ve got the natural beauty but you’ve also got the human history with Arltunga and, with us now, you’ve got some pastoral history too," Lynne Leigh says as we devour her burgers for lunch in ‘The Workshop’ – a converted shed that serves as the hub of the campground and other accommodation on the property. Loaded with pickles, jalapeños, beetroot, pineapple, egg and bacon, it’s easily one of the best Aussie burgers I’ve ever had.

 

Some places make you feel immediately at home and this shed, among the riot of Australiana and antique farm memorabilia, is one of them.

 

“The East Macs are becoming the new kid on the block," Lynne continues. “It’s always been here but visitor numbers are definitely growing."

 

Lynne’s daughter Sophie takes us on a tour of the property, to the retro caravan – part of a package deal when they bought a backhoe – where her son, David, does his School of the Air lessons. Curious guests can pay a gold-coin donation to sit and watch as he dials in each morning from his private classroom.

 

The cottage and homestead on the property date to the early 1900s, with renovations from the ’50s and ’60s perfectly maintained. “It’s a bit like stepping back in time," says Sophie as I admire the retro kitchen in the cottage, which originally served as stockmen’s quarters.

The rock art of the East Macs marks the importance of the place to the Arrernte people

What is even older than the gold-rush history of the East Macs, of course, is the history of the Arrernte people and the rock art found at several sites nearby. “We’ve got some time – I want to take you somewhere special," Filippo tells me as we wave goodbye to Lynne and Sophie and start to head for N’Dhala Gorge Nature Park.

N’Dhala Gorge Nature Park

A short walk takes us into the narrow gorge where 6000 individual petroglyphs, or rock carvings – some as old as 10,000 years – decorate the red rock walls. This is the story of the Caterpillar Dreaming, with intricate circles and lines showing caterpillars transforming to butterflies. Many were done by pecking: holding a sharp stone against the rock and striking it with another, heavier stone.

Filippo leads the way into N’Dhala Gorge

The Caterpillar Dreaming is also told at Emily Gap – a small chasm in the Heavitree Range – where we stop on our way back into Alice. This site is part of the storyline for the Three Caterpillars, Yeperenye, Ntyarlke and Utnerrengatye, which are the ancestral beings for the Alice Springs area.

 

Vivid lines of ochre mark the walls of this open-air gallery, in the spot where Intwailuka, an ancestral hero, is said to have cooked and eaten caterpillars on his Dreamtime journey.

 

The sun is close to setting as we drive back into Alice, at the crossroads of the East and West Macs. Tomorrow I’ll set out with a group to hike for five days along the Larapinta Trail in the West MacDonnell Ranges, which is sure to be an unforgettable experience. But with little exertion and gourmet coffee to boot, the East Macs have already provided a microcosm of the Red Centre in just one day.

For more information on the East MacDonnell Ranges & things to do in the NT, visit the official Northern Territory website at northernterritory.com

Celeste Mitchell
With visions of hosting Getaway, Celeste Mitchell graduated with a Bachelor of Journalism and entered the hard-hitting world of boy bands, puberty, and fashion, writing for magazines like Girlfriend, Total Girl, CLEO and TV Hits in the early noughties (there was a lot of Twilight references). Since switching gears to full-time freelancer in 2013, focused exclusively on travel, she’s criss-crossed the globe, opened a co-working space, lived in Mexico, and co-founded slow and sustainable site, Life Unhurried. The Sunshine Coast-based author (Life Unhurried & Ultimate Beaches Australia, Hardie Grant) and mum of two regularly pinches herself that she gets to explore new places and ask all the nosy questions she wants in the name of work.
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8 Northern Territory secrets the locals don’t want you to know

Summer transforms the Northern Territory into a lush paradise of colour and life, as a visit during the ‘low-season’ reveals secrets the locals willingly share.

Waterlilies bloom, floodplains are alive with birdlife, waterfalls are gushing, and everywhere the green is dazzling. Summer in the Top End and the Red Centre is a kaleidoscope of unexpected wonders that delight and surprise visitors. Of course, the locals know only too well that the Northern Territory low season is often the best time to see and experience this amazing part of Australia.

Here are some of the reasons why savvy travellers – avoiding the crowds – are discovering a new dimension to the Territory. Remember that you’ll need a Parks Pass to visit national parks.

1. Take a dip in the Florence Falls waterhole

Wander through savanna woodland and monsoon forest to discover the perfect place to cool off – the waterhole at the base of spectacular Florence Falls in the magnificent Litchfield National Park , just 90 minutes’ drive from Darwin. The falls flow year-round but are most spectacular during the summer. Camping is available nearby but bookings are essential and must be made online before you visit.

Surrounded by lush forest, a woman cools off in Florence Falls, just one of many incredible things to do in the Northern Territory.
Cool off beneath the cascading waters of Florence Falls. (Image: Joshua Griffin)

2. Wind down at Buley Rock Hole

Another popular local swimming spot in Litchfield National Park is Buley Rock Hole , open year-round. This is a great place to wind down after exploring everything the park has to offer, including towering termite mounds. Wade through the rock pools, soak up the scenic bush or just lie back and relax as the cool water rolls over you.

Buley Rockhole, Litchfield National Park
Let the cool water wash over you. (Image: Tourism Australia)

3. Tour the Tiwi Islands

The Tiwi Islands , a scenic 80km flight from Darwin across the narrow Clarence and Dundas Straits, reveal a different side to the Territory, with their own distinctive culture. Take a day tour with Tiwi by Design to visit Bathurst Island and learn about creation stories, the Mission days, World War II history and the islanders’ obsession with AFL!

Take a ‘behind-the-scenes’ tour of Tiwi Design’s screen-printing workshop and pick up a great souvenir in the form of art. Choose from contemporary or traditional Tiwi designs and a wide range of work including carvings, paintings, pottery, printmaking, bark paintings and tunga (bark baskets).

A creative moment shared inside Tiwi Design’s screen-printing space.
Take a peek inside Tiwi Design’s screen-printing studio. (Image: Tourism NT)

4. Dine in Darwin

Foodies are spoilt for choice in multi-cultural Darwin. Try Sri Lankan flavours at Ella by Minoli, where Masterchef contestant Minoli De Silva creates delectable dishes, or head to Charlie’s of Darwin for gin-tasting, cocktails and more. Bowls of fragrant laksa, excellent coffee, fresh vegetables and authentic crafts are all part of a weekend visit to Darwin’s Parap Markets , Rapid Creek Markets and the Nightcliff Markets .

Prefer to catch your own dinner? Book a Top End fishing charter to bag a barramundi – and from October register for the annual Million Dollar Fish competition. Hooking one of the tagged barra released each year in waterways across the Territory could win you up to $1 million.

A bowl of Laksa.
Eat your way through multicultural Darwin. (Image: Tourism NT)

5. Up close with Uluṟu

The magnificent monolith Uluṟu is even more magical when the summer rains fall. When it rains on The Rock, the locals come out to watch – consider yourself lucky if that happens when you visit. Waterfalls cascading off the sides of Uluṟu is a sight that relatively few tourists see.

There’s so much to do at Uluṟu, from guided walks to learn the stories of the Aṉangu people and the ancient landscape they live in to scenic flights for a bird’s-eye view or a leisurely walk around the base of Uluṟu. Book ahead to spend the evening wandering through the Field of Light installation by Bruce Munro.

A closer look at Uluru and uncover its ancient stories, sacred sites, and striking natural beauty – one of the most iconic things to do in the Northern Territory.
Discover the details that make Uluṟu truly sacred. (Image: Tourism NT)

6. Drive the Red Centre Way

From Alice Springs, take an epic road trip along the Red Centre Way, taking in Uluru and Watarrka National Park, home to the magnificent Kings Canyon. Allow at least a week to drive through the red heart of Australia by 4WD, a little longer on the sealed road by 2WD vehicle, travelling through ochre deserts, palm-lined valleys and dramatic gorges. Stop off at waterholes for a refreshing dip along the way.

Kings Canyon offers hiking options for all levels of fitness, from the three-hour Rim Walk atop soaring sandstone walls to the gentler Kings Creek Walk. Either way, you’ll have breathtaking views.

SEIT Outback Australia is a small group touring specialist offering exciting, adventurous, exclusive and specialised iconic, pioneering and cultural touring in the Red Centre of Australia, giving you the time to learn, absorb and relax in the heart of Australia.<br /><br />This innovative tour company focuses on providing clients with the ultimate interpretive touring experiences with a range of products and customised touring itineraries for small groups and bespoke private charters.<br /><br />The company bases its philosophies from the key words of Spirit, Emotion, Intellect and Task (SEIT).
Drive through Australia’s heart. (Image: Outback Australia Tours)

7. Take a walk at Kata Tjuṯa

Head out early to tackle the Valley of the Winds Walk at Kata Tjuṯa . This natural wonder, also known as The Olgas, is a labyrinth of soaring ochre domes that glow golden at sunrise and sunset (the walk may be closed during the middle of the day as temperatures rise).

Walking trails range from easy to longer, more difficult tracks. At the Kata Tjuṯa dune viewing area, take in the panoramic view of the domes. The longest of the trails is the Valley of the Winds Walk, a 7.4km circuit that winds between the domes and through creek beds. It’s moderately difficult and steep in places, but offers stunning views – and occasional encounters with kangaroos.

The Valley of the Winds Walk at Kata Tjuta is one of the most awe-inspiring things to do in the Northern Territory, especially at sunrise when the domes glow golden.
Step into the golden light of Kata Tjuṯa. (Image: Tourism NT)

8. Explore Tjoritja/West MacDonnell Ranges

Tjoritja/West MacDonnell National Park lies 135km west of Alice Springs, with many fascinating natural features to beguile visitors. The ‘West Macs’ formations include chasms, gorges and waterholes – take your swimsuit for a dip at Ormiston Gorge waterhole, open year-round. The Ormiston Pound Walk is a three to four-hour circuit that leaves from the visitor centre and loops back along the gorge via the main waterhole. Other places of interest in the park include Simpsons Gap , Standley Chasm , Ellery Creek Big Hole and Glen Helen .

Soaking in the serenity of Ormiston Gorge, these two travellers enjoy one of the most scenic things to do in the Northern Territory.
Take the plunge at Ormiston Gorge waterhole. (Image: Joshua Griffin Litchfield)

Start planning the NT road trip of a lifetime at northernterritory.com