Outer Edge Edition 49 - Ultimate Adventure Pass | Page 9

Proserpine, to the south-west of Hydeaway Bay is a great place to make a break if you are journeying down the Queensland coast. Restaurants, Cafes, Coffee shops and Food Outlets are a plenty, and nearby is Lake Proserpine and the Peter Faust Dam, home to some of the biggest barramundi you can catch. Proserpine was established around 1890 just after the sugar mill was constructed and it experienced high growth in the early 1900s as the local sugar industry grew and began exporting raw sugar via the Proserpine Landing where it was sent to refineries. The township is floated by the Proserpine Co-operative Sugar Mill (Now Wilmar Sugar Mill), which processes the region’s 2,000,000+ tons of sugar cane each year for export. Travelling by car through the Whitsundays wouldn’t be complete without venturing to Airlie Beach. The town is world-renowned as a party stop, and with its well-presented streetscape, and tourist driven economy, it’s a must visit place. Not only is it party central of the Whitsundays, it’s also the best access point for the main tourist islands like South Molle, Hamilton, Hook and Whitsunday Islands. If you’re planning on utilising some of the great available tours on your journey, Airlie Beach is the best spot to take them. Hiking, jet skiing, kayaking, ocean rafting and parasailing are all available from the one place. Travelling out from Airlie Beach, you will benefit from visiting a little place called Conway Beach. Conway Beach is located 30 minutes from Airlie Beach, and is a popular spot for fishing and wind-powered sports such as kite surfing and land kiting. The two kilometre sandy stretch of Conway Beach is positioned at the mouth of the Proserpine River, and is an excellent location for catching mud crabs, barramundi, king and blue salmon, grunter, whiting, flathead and bream. Heading south towards Mackay there are a number of stop in towns that pay to visit, purely for the sake of their quaint beauty. Midge Point, St Helen’s Beach, Ball Bay, Cape Hillsborough National Park and Shoal Point are all noteworthy places to visit. As you head into Mackay, you will notice art deco buildings, charming cafes and palm-tree lined streets that make the city quite unique. The Botanical Gardens, the Bluewater Trail and manmade Bluewater Lagoon are worth every minute you spend there. There are breweries, art galleries, museums, water-skiing and jet-skiing activities, and like every other place in the Whitsundays, there are pristine beaches. Driving south from Mackay offers you options of a visit to the Hay Point Dalrymple Bay Coal Terminal, to see some of the biggest ships you will ever lay eyes on, shipping coal for export. Further south lies the quaint sugar town of Sarina, which is located on Plane Creek, which flows into the Coral Sea, but most of the urban development is on the northern side of the creek, including the Sarina Sugar Mill In Sarina, the most memorable tourist attraction would have to be a large cane toad statue, called Buffy, that is situated in the town centre in honour of Sarina’s cane farming history.