Unexpected things you can do at Uluṟu

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The real Uluṟu is glamorous, vaguely dangerous and magnificently sexy. And, despite the desert setting, whether you skydive over it, ride around it on a Harley-Davidson or recline in Longitude 131’s glamping luxury, Uluṟu is a surprisingly brilliant holiday spot. Georgia Rickard takes it all in

4:45am – yes,  in the morning!

… and someone’s palms are greased with sweat. “No, I feel great," he insists. His words hang in the air; a blatant lie. I decide to let it slide.

We’re in our flatteringly-lit hotel lobby, my boyfriend and I, waiting for our early-morning transfer to Ayers Rock Airport.

(You’re not alone in wondering why they haven’t yet renamed it ‘Uluru Airport’, by the way. Apparently a good portion of would-be visitors still fly to Alice Springs, thinking it’s the closest port to the rock; a name change would just be inviting trouble.)

We’re about to board a plane, but we’re not leaving the area. Aside from handling the area’s arrivals and departures, the airport is home to the area’s light aircraft services, which includes joy-flights around the region, helicopter rides over the rock and, for those brave (or foolhardy) enough to sign their heart rates away, another option that’s only very recently joined the menu: skydiving.

Uluru, Northern Territory
An unexpected delight is waterfalls on Uluru when it rains.

It all sounded terribly romantic, this idea of a lifetime experience at a lifetime destination, but the reality is proving slightly more… clammy. The boyfriend wipes his hands on his shorts again. We are not the only ones looking wide-eyed at this hour.

Chefs, guides and concierges have already begun their days, rising to start work beneath a sequinned sky while Uluru casts an indigo shadow on the horizon.

As our minivan pulls away from the kerb, an early-bird pair of tail lights glows ahead of us on the road. Someone else is off on an adventure too, it seems.

First time visitors are often surprised by Uluru’s Mutijulu waterhole (Photo: Brigitte Drew)

Countless articles have been written about this place; most extolling the majesty and grandeur of the rock.

Uluru is a crowd pleaser, it’s true. But it’s only one of three enormous masterpieces in this natural art gallery, and the other two are all the more enjoyable for their surprise factor.

Indeed, it is often nearby Kata Tjuta – a collection of 36 heads (formerly known as The Olgas) that rise, with poetic grace, even higher than Uluru – that steals the most breaths.

Kata Tjuta (formerly the Olgas) rises higher than Uluru
Kata Tjuta (formerly the Olgas) rises higher than Uluru (photo: Elisse Hassey).

Flat-topped Mount Conner, a close cousin in the looks department to Uluru (though a mountain, as opposed to a monolith), completes the magnificent triad, and though it’s best known for generating great excitement in first-time road trippers (locals have named it ‘Fooluru’ for this reason), it has plenty of its own unique delights, too.

5:45am – nice to meet you, Longitude 131, be back soon

While we’re sitting through the pre-jump safety briefing, head chef Shonaugh Moss is pulling her day’s batch of jam drops out of the oven.

 

Uluru view: Longitude 131
Uluru view: Longitude 131 (photo: Elise Hassey).

The daily treats, baked under strict guidelines of a Country Women’s Association recipe (and made with a ‘red centre’ of wild rosella jam and native spices), are left in suites each morning at ultra-luxe glampsite Longitude 131°, a mix of wholesome baking and Australian humour for guests to enjoy beneath the suites’ gauzy cream tent ceilings.

“That recipe was her choice," Adrian Levy, general manager of the resort, will explain later, after some much-needed biscuit sampling has taken place. “The jam too. Everything’s about capitalising on the amazing sense of place here."

The mini-resort has been at the top of travel wish-lists since first opening a decade ago (though global interest reached new heights when Oprah, and then Prince William and Kate stayed here) – you could say capturing the sense of place is something they do rather well.

longitude 131 uluru accommodation stays glamping dune pavillion
Uluru is never far from view when you stay at Longitude 131 (photo: Leigh-Ann Pow).

But most guests aren’t lying around, enjoying the view of Uluru, which sits at a tactful, but spectacularly intimate distance through floor-to-ceiling windows at the end of each tent’s four-poster bed.

By the time today’s jam drops have cooled, the resort will be in full swing; the early risers enjoying breakfast and the earlier risers already exploring nature’s wonders by plane, train, bike, hike or chopper. And the rock will have changed colour, from a periwinkle haze to the palest apricot; the visual translation of a desert yawn.

Plunge pool. Longitude 131, Uluru, Northern Territory
Longitude 131, Uluru. Photo courtesy of Tourism NT.

6:57am – skydiving Uluru

As our small plane floats off the ground Uluru has changed yet again; blushing coral as the rest of the day unfurls in a pink swirl of morning air and sunlight. It is a beautiful view. Even if one has a slight sick feeling in their stomach.

Elsewhere, a fortunate couple is standing on top of Mount Conner, admiring the same landscape from a rather different vantage. Though the mountain is best known for its similarity to Uluru, its natural beauty has sparked a burgeoning tourism industry (as well as several proposals, and even one mountain-top wedding).

This particular couple has booked the sunrise helicopter experience to the rugged terrain on top of the mountain. He is taking full stock of the breakfast hamper, eyeing off freshly baked wattleseed scrolls, freshly cut fruit, warm breakfast tarts and freshly squeezed apple and pear juice (her preferred flavour).

She is listening to their pilot detail their landing on the edge of the mountain top’s wild, scrubby terrain. In a moment they will clink glasses of Louis Roederer; in another moment he will descend on bended knee. (She won’t say no.) A different kind of adrenaline is running through our small plane cabin.

“See over there?" says Sam McKay, owner of Skydive Ayers Rock, and of the harness reassuringly roped through mine. A series of mountains, knotted along the hazy horizon, glimmer in the distance. “They’re in Western Australia.

“And over there" – he points through another window of the tiny plane cabin – “that range is in South Australia."

If ever you’ve wanted to skydive – something I’m not so sure about, at this precise moment – this place would have to be top of the wish-list. Wouldn’t it?

McKay certainly felt that way; he spent a year battling red tape to get his business up and going, although just six months of operation has already rewarded him with a steady stream of customers. It seems the idea of ticking off one bucket-list item while visiting another is too alluring to refuse.

“Are you ready?" Sam shouts, but my answer is lost to the wind and it doesn’t matter anyway, because all of a sudden we’re free falling so fast my cheeks are positively flapping, and I’m fairly certain I left my stomach back in the plane.

But this is happening, and for all the adrenaline screeching its way round each corner of my body there’s time enough to notice Uluru below, looming large like a rich man’s belly. Terror turns to amazement, and then endorphins kick down the doors with gusto. This is brilliant!

Skydiving over Uluru
Skydiving Uluru – is this the best way to see the rock (photo: Elisse Hassey).

7:06am – back at Ayers Rock Resort

“Pass me the tomatoes?" asks Kimberley McDonnell, happily. Kulata Academy Café doesn’t open for another 54 minutes, but the 20-year-old is already prepping for the upcoming lunch rush.

She’s one of several indigenous trainees earning her stripes – and a certificate in hospitality – here; at the end of her year-long course, she’ll accept a guaranteed job at either Ayers Rock Resort or the hotel’s management company, Accor. “That can take you pretty much anywhere in the world, because Accor is global," she explains, proudly.

McDonnell has been working here for three months, having moved from the NSW Central Coast. “It was a hard transition for me because I have a big family and I missed living with them, but now I like it," she explains. “My ultimate goal is to go into bar work."

While my boyfriend and I are high-fiving each other, grinning like five-year-olds and congratulating each other on making the jump, McDonnell and her Ayers Rock Resort (ARR) colleagues – all 1100 of them – are getting right into the daily grind.

Humankind isn’t particularly good at many things – sharing, time travel, saying sorry – but its feats of engineering really are to be marvelled at, and the existence of ARR is a prime example.

With a post office, supermarket, town square, bank, hair salon, hostel, camping ground, several restaurants and four (four!) hotels, the resort feels more like an outback town than anything else, but what’s most surprising, aside from the very acceptable latte McDonnell will serve me later, is the modernity of it all – in every sense of the word.

To say it’s a different scene to the ’50s, when cheese and butter were stored in one of Uluru’s sacred waterholes, is an exercise in restraint.

8:00am – the sacred Kata Tjuta

This year marks the 30th anniversary of handback to the area’s traditional owners, Anangu, at which point it was agreed that the park would henceforth be jointly managed by Anangu and Parks Australia.

But “almost nothing" is known about the indigenous cultural significance of the park’s second major attraction Kata Tjuta, says accredited guide Michelle Whitehouse, who works for Longitude 131°.

“We know Kata Tjuta means ‘many heads’, and that it’s a place of men’s business. Anangu women won’t look in this direction; they won’t come here," she says. “But other than that, it’s shrouded in mystery."

Its sacred status is the same reason why almost all commercial photography has been forbidden at Kata Tjuta (save for images shot at a certain distance), and the resulting lack of expectation makes hanging out by the entrance quite good fun. We sit for a few minutes and watch as first-time visitors, whether from Java, Japan or Australia, walk past with identical faces of amazement.

Kata Tjuta, Northern Territory
Just like a heap of Ulurus all mushed together, Kata Tjuta shines under the outback sun. Image by Tourism NT

By 8am, the main walk through Walpa Gorge (loosely translated to ‘windy gorge’) is buzzing with visitors, but it’s the relatively secret back entrance, via the four-hour Valley of the Winds walk, where Kata Tjuta really comes to life.

Whitehouse is taking us on an edited version, to Karingana Lookout and back, but she says we’ll still see the walk’s highlights, and she just might be right.

The walk’s zenith, Karingana Lookout gazes out to a series of flats that are not just beautiful but so astoundingly verdant, they could be Victorian farmland, while valleys between each bulbous mountain are equally lush: strange, dream-like patches of paradise created by a mad hatter, who perhaps started with an English countryside in mind but chose delirious colours to paint with, gleefully upscaling and warping dimensions as he went.

Walpa Gorge, Kata-Tjuta, Northern Terriotry
The more accessible Walpa Gorge walk, Kata Tjuta.

As we admire the sound of birds twittering madly and dive-bombing the temporarily running river, two pale foreigners limply walk past, wearing unnecessary fly nets and sweating heavily.

Their portable radio blasts tinny techno into the silence. Aside from their intrusion, however, the area is almost entirely free of signs of modern human life.

In the peace and quiet, it is easy to imagine why this area has long been so highly sacred.

11:00am – painting and other outback arts

Red-cheeked hikers are filtering into Longitude 131°’s reception area, accepting house-made lemon and barley ice-blocks before sinking into air-conditioned bliss, as Heather Duff begins her silk painting workshop at ARR’s nearby Desert Gardens Hotel.

 

Heather Duff, Uluru, Northern Territory
Artist Heather Duff at work as the artist in residence at Sails in the Desert at Uluru. Image by Greg Barton

Duff has been “on and off" as an artist-in-residence here for 12 years but cannot, by her own admission, leave for good. “I sort of fell in love with the region, and in the end it took over my life," she says. “Uluru is like a good movie, you can always find something new."

Her workshop is one of several on rotation at the resort, on a schedule that includes glass blowing, jewellery making, dot painting and weaving, and is surprisingly absorbing.

When was the last time you found yourself lost in the task of making something for fun?

Noon – another one of the rock’s moods

If you can tear yourself away, however, you’ll find a sense of surrealism at the rock ascending to its daily zenith. Uluru is not, as pictures might have you believe, a lovely, crumbling old thing.

Uluru, Northern Territory
Uluru is highly textured by the look and feel. (Photo: Brigitte Drew)

It’s hard and smooth, pockmarked with various craters.

Around 94 per cent of the rock is actually underground, shooting straight down into Earth’s crust, and what’s visible on the surface is not the top of the rock but in fact the tip of one side. (Picture Titanic, tipping vertically as it makes its final descent into icy waters, and you get the idea.)

Uluru at noon
Uluru at noon from the newest viewing platform (Photo: Grenville Turner)

At noon, the base of the rock feels hyperreal. Puffs of cloud sit frozen, arranged in perfect rows, under a sky that glows computer-generated blue.

Trees stand tall in a series of dots and dashes; muted green morse code on a rolling wave of iron-red soil and champagne-coloured spinifex.

And the masterpiece in the middle of it all – now unapologetically orange – seems so bright, in the middle of that horizon, that it almost glows. Though most guests seek out a sunrise or sunset visit, which have their own attractions to them, the rock at midday leaves an indelible mental memory.

2:00pm – to climb or not to climb

By mid-afternoon, reception at ARR’s premium hotel, Sails in the Desert , is buzzing with guests.

Sails in the Desert, Uluru
The five star resort at Uluru, Sails in the Desert.

First-day arrivals are milling about, holding welcome glasses of chilled, lemon myrtle-infused apple juice – a flavour they’ll see again later on in the year when the restaurant offers a new cocktail-making class (alongside other local flavours, such as quandong, and globally-appreciated spirits like Belvedere vodka).

Kids are launching themselves into the giant pool, while parents read books on lounge chairs. Others are padding through on their way back from the city-standard day spa, easily distinguishable by their pudding legs and dazed smiles.

Over at national park headquarters, however, this time of day is all business. “The days here are 30 hours long," muses Parks Australia employee Claudianna Blanco. On hiatus from Sydney, Blanco took her position here in order to have ‘a real life experience’, and she hasn’t regretted a moment.

“Every day brings rewards and challenges," she continues, as we walk through the air-conditioned offices – the latter no doubt including management of ‘the climb’.

In 2010, the park’s board of management voted to start working towards closing the 1.6-kilometre trek up Uluru’s side. It will be closed once and for all in October 2019.

In the meantime, Anangu request people ‘please don’t climb’ through signage at the base of the rock (check out our five great reasons not to climb Uluru).

“It’s for cultural reasons – the rock is sacred to Anangu – but it’s also due to environmental concerns," Blanco explains. “Having people climb the rock affects the environment in a number of ways: erosion, litter and water pollution." Water pollution?

“People climb up, use any area as a bathroom, and when it rains, the waste flows from the top of the rock into waterholes at the base, polluting what is one of the precious few water sources for wildlife," she says.

Finally, she says, it can be dangerous. “Over 40 people have died from attempting it," she says flatly. “Dehydration, heart attacks, people falling off or tripping. And that doesn’t include people who are seriously injured. The Anangu feel great responsibility and sorrow when people die; they have been known to travel to climbers’ funerals."

However, despite such issues, there’s a magic in the air here, in a very real and visceral sense. “Everyone gets electric shocks here. All the time," Blanco agrees, gesturing out the window. “They say it might be because of the heat, but who knows?"

Outside, Uluru twinkles innocently in the hazy afternoon light, deceptive in its beauty.

4:49PM – off into the sunset, on a Harley

As the sun begins its final descent, the warm air takes on a purple tinge. The rock hides beneath a blue haze now, a mirage of shimmering rust. On the back of a Harley, the warm wind slides around us like a river.

Uluru on the back of a Harley-Davidson (photo: Elisse Hassey).
Crusing Uluru by Harley-Davidson (photo: Elisse Hassey).

Our Harley-riding ‘chauffeur’, Bill Sadler of Uluru Cycles, used to be a rodeo cowboy, but felt an “inexplicable" pull to come here. “I love this life," he nods.

We slip past a combi, one window papered with cloth. Three dozen more cars are lined up next to the first, their passengers settling in for the evening show with easy conversation and tinnies in hand. Two kids run around an esky. The Harley zooms by.

As the next hour passes the rock will perform the day’s final encore: rust, cinnamon, crimson, rose. At this moment, however, as we round the curve of Uluru’s shadow we confront a field bright with savannah; grass strands glowing like sunlit embers of a fire. This side of Uluru is the more culturally sensitive of the two; dimpled with craters, like honeycomb, it is a sight you’ll never see in brochures.

Later, when the sun has gone down and the faintest lingering pinks have left, the sky will break out in lightning. The star-gazers will gasp, the wind will sigh, and Uluru will rise again the following morning, to go through it all again.

Unusual Uluṟu Activities Details

Skydive Uluru

Harley Davidson Uluṟu tours with Uluru Motorcycle Tours

More Uluru Tours on Two Wheels

Helicopter Joy Rides from Professional Helicopter Services

Dot painting workshop at Ayers Rock Resort

Free bush tucker experiences at Ayers Rock Resort

More Free activities at Ayers Rock Resort

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8 Red Centre locations to explore after seeing the new movie, Kangaroo

Spend a few days visiting the real-life Central Australian locations that inspired the new film everyone is talking about, and discover why Alice Springs is such an important part of Australian culture.

In the credits of the new Australian film Kangaroo , the first name under ‘cast’ should read ‘The Northern Territory ’. Not only is Alice Springs (and the surrounding landscape) integral to the movie itself, but the spiritual heart of Australia and its local Indigenous owners also inform the look and feel of every frame, explains Producer Trisha Morton-Thomas of Brindle Films, who also plays Charlie’s grandmother Gwennie.

“By setting Kangaroo in Alice Springs (Mparntwe), the film embraces how visible Aboriginal people are here, and the living Aboriginal culture that is woven through this community,” she explains.

still from kangarro film
See Kangaroo, then visit the real-life filming locations.

And while shooting in such a sacred part of the Northern Territory required extra planning, it was something the cast and crew were highly invested in.

“There are incredibly significant sacred sites and places of deep cultural stories in the area, that at times are very gender-specific, which we’ve kept out of the production,” she explains. “Even if overhead drone footage captures a sacred site that isn’t meant to be seen by other people outside of that clan, we’ve made sure to omit it from the film.”

If Kangaroo piqued your interest in a Central Australian holiday, we don’t blame you. Read on to discover eight places featured in the movie that you can visit in real life – and get planning. Don’t forget to pack sunscreen and a hat.

1. Alice Springs/ Mparntwe

artist at Many Hands Art Centre
Visit the galleries of Alice Springs, like Many Hands Art Centre. (Image: Tourism NT/ Helen Orr/ Many Hands Art Centre)

The red and dusty streets of the film’s fictional town of Silvergum were filmed on the outskirts of Alice Springs. And, while the art gallery featured in the film is fictional, Alice Springs is a hub of creativity. See the work of local artists at the Araluen Art Centre , Yubu Napa Art Gallery , Iltja Ntjarra (Many Hands) Art Centre and the famous Tjanpi Desert Weavers .

2. The Kangaroo Sanctuary & Kangaroo Rescue Centre

The Kangaroo Sanctuary Alice Springs, the inspiration for the Kangaroo move
Visit the movie’s inspiration at Kangaroo Sanctuary. (Image: Tourism NT/ Kangaroo Sanctuary)

Kangaroo was inspired by the journey of Chris ‘Brolga’ Barns, who founded the now world-renowned Kangaroo Sanctuary based in Alice Springs. For lead actor, Aussie Ryan Corr, the animals were central to the movie, alongside the landscapes.

“The animals in this story were a real calling point for me,” he explains. “What this story tries to tell us about the connection between humans and animals is beautiful.”

To gain a real insight into the fauna and flora of the Red Centre, you can visit the Kangaroo Sanctuary on a sunset tour, where you might even get the chance to hold a baby kangaroo.

3. Ormiston Gorge

woman walking along the edge of Ormiston Gorge near alice springs
Take a dip in Ormiston Gorge. (Image: Tourism NT/ @domandjesso)

The film captures the raw beauty of the West MacDonnell Ranges, known in the Arrernte language as Tjoritja. This national park is rich in Indigenous culture and stark geological wonders.

Only a 15-minute drive from Alice Springs, Tjoritja offers visitors the chance to camp, hike and swim among ancient landscapes (most attractions are less than a three-hour drive away).

Ormiston Gorge , a cooling oasis in among the red desert sands, is one of the most popular destinations, no doubt because of the permanent swimming hole and towering red cliffs. From here, visitors can also embark on the beautiful Ormiston Pound Walk and the shorter – more accessible – Ghost Gum Walk. Bring your bathers – it’s safe for swimming.

4. Standley Chasm

woman walking through Standley Chasm near alice springs
Wander through Standley Chasm. (Image: Tourism NT)

The 1.2-kilometre walk to nearby Standley Chasm will be a highlight for any visitor as the imposing 40 metre-high chasm walls project strength and ancient wisdom.

Visit at midday to experience the path illumined by the midday sun. Not only will you fill your camera roll with vibrant red images of the gorge and its intoxicating shadows, but you can also camp nearby in a powered or unpowered site so you can watch the brilliance of the desert stars fill the night sky after dusk.

5. Simpsons Gap

three people walking on path through simpsons gap near alice springs
Walk the trails of Simpson’s Gap. (Image: Tourism NT/ Helen Orr)

Closer to Alice Springs, the photogenic Simpsons Gap is the perfect place to spot the endangered Black-footed Rock wallaby near the permanent watering hole. While swimming isn’t permitted, soaking up the sun and views certainly is.

Explore the area’s numerous walking trails, appreciate the soaring cliffs on either side of the ‘gap’ and pick out the shooting locations of Kangaroo in the area.

6. Ellery Creek Big Hole

aerial of Ellery Creek Big Hole near alice springs
Dive into Ellery Creek Big Hole. (Image: Tourism NT/ Tourism Australia)

When it comes to classic Northern Territory landscapes, you can’t go past Ellery Creek Big Hole/ Udepata : tall gum trees sidling up to a refreshing watering hole (fed by the West MacDonnell Ranges and surrounded by rugged red cliffs.

Swim in the cooling waters, hike the cliff tops, watch for birds and even stargaze as you camp here overnight. It’s locations like this that attracted the film’s director Kate Woods to the project.

“It humbles you to be in this environment: it’s so beautiful, so old and so vast,” she explains. “I was thrilled to get a chance to … shoot such a beautiful story in the incredible landscape of the Northern Territory.”

7. Larapinta Drive

aerial of Larapinta Drive into alice springs
Drive along Larapinta Drive. (Image: Tourism NT)

There is no better way to get a feel for how the characters arrived at the fictional Central Australian town of Silvergum than to travel along the iconic state road, Larapinta Drive.

Connecting Alice Springs to the mighty King’s Canyon in the west, via the historic community of Hermannsburg, this road takes in the West MacDonnell National Park, Alice Springs Desert Park and artist Albert Namatjira’s house, among other attractions. Take your time, bring a camera and prepare for numerous stops along the way.

8. Todd River

competitors in Henley on Todd Regatta, alice springs
Join in the fun of the quirky Henley on Todd Regatta. (Image: Tourism NT/ TImparja Creative)

Meandering through Alice Springs like a lazy Western Brown snake, the Todd River is a central part of Alice Springs culture. Known as an ‘intermittent river’, the Todd can go from a dry dusty riverbed to a flowing waterscape in less than 15 minutes after heavy rainfall.

When it’s dry, the famous Henley on Todd Regatta fills the sandy riverbed with handmade ‘boats’ carried by sailors. This is the world’s only dry river boating event, and it’s referenced in the ‘Silvergum Boat Race’ in the movie. Inspired by the real-life event, the characters built quirky “Flintstones-style boats” and competed in teams.

See Kangaroo in cinemas now, and start planning your NT getaway at northernterritory.com.