What Happens When You Travel Australia in the Summer
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 12:35pm (GMT)
First things first: summer in Australia is the direct opposite of
summer in the Northern Hemisphere. Yes, you heard right. In Australia,
summer actually happens from December to February. Which means Aussies
celebrate their Christmas at the height of summer. Which means they get
to do more things they otherwise couldn't do if they were in the
wintry, arctic regions on the Northern Hemisphere. Blessed be the
Australian summer.
But watch out: the Australian summer can be very hot and
unforgiving, but this is just fine as long as you keep a handy bottle
of sunscreen with you and arm yourself with a good pair of UV-proof
sunglasses. For Aussie families, summer generally is the time to hit
the beach and frolic in the waters. Summer also marks the mid-year
break for students; instead of springbreak, they enjoy summer holidays
or Christmas holidays. And for backpackers who roam and travel
Australia, the Aussie summer can be a liberating experience. Even
businesspeople who like to keep busy with work even during the holidays
prefer to leave their freezing homelands and travel Australia to seek
its cosy warmth.
Before you get any misplaced ideas about Australia as being just
pure hard summer, you have to realise that Australia is such a large
country that each region experiences different weather patterns. Up
north where the tropical rainforests reign, it's mainly high
temperatures and high humidity and distinct wet and dry seasons. In the
centre of the country, where the Outback sprawls, it's dry, desert
regions with high daytime temperatures and occasional bursts of rain.
In the south are the temperate regions with moderate rainfall and
temperatures ranging from hot to cold.
To travel Australia in all its entirety is to witness nature's awesome
and breathtaking display of colors, heat, frenzy, and vibrance. It's a
land of extremes: one moment you could be enjoying a runny pistachio
ice cream under the scorching sun, the next, you could be snuggling
tight with a loved one under the velvety pouring rain. There's no
perfect weather in which to travel Australia. After all wherever we go,
we all bring along with us our pieces of sky and sun and climate.
http://www.nationalvisas.com.au/
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