Australie et Nouvelle-Zélande: quelles parties visiter?
by Ilham36
This discussion is in French, the community’s main language.
Original post
bonjour.
je pars faire un tdm bientot, et je passe par l'australie et la nouvelle -zelande, pour une petite periode;3semane en austr et 1semaine en NZ.
j'aimerai savoir quelle region serait interessante, à visiter en priorité en austr, sans que j'aie besoin de trop de temps!
ma 2ème questionest:si je ne peux faire qu'une partie de la NZ, que me conseillez-vous, le sud ou le nord(en sachant que je ne suis pas une fana de sport, mais je prefère la nature)
je vous remercie pour les conseiles
Je remarque que ton message est resté sans réponse tant il est difficile de te conseiller un itinéraire en Australie et NZ pour si peu de temps. Peut-être faudrait-il mieux te cantonner à l'Australie?
Si tu veux vraiment inscrire la NZ sur ton périple (qui effectivement ne serait pas complet sans ça), il faut vraiment cerner ce que tu aimes le plus : la végétation luxuriante, les côtes découpées, les fjords, les volcans, les montagnes, la faune...
Si tu vas dans la région des volcans et qu'il peut toute la semaine, tu auras perdu ton temps, aussi est-il peut-être plus judicieux de longer la côte autour de Christchurch dans l'ile du Sud et profiter des animaux marins. Tu y seras à quelle époque?
Bon voyage!
bonjour.merci pour ton aide.
c'est vrai que ce n'est pas facile de repondre à ce genre de question(c'est pour ça d'ailleur que je la pose!)
il se trouve que je fais un TDM de 11mois, et j'ai des preferences telles que l'asie et l'amerique du sud où je vais passer le plus de temps, je pensais que sur mon parcours je peux introduire l'ausralie et la nouvelle zelande pour +/- 1mois, je ne veux pas visiter un maximum de regions, ni voir un max de choses, juste quelques coins qui vous semblent incourtournables(je ne fais pas de sport nautique, ni de la plongée s/marine)j'aime beacoup la pierre, et donc les volcans m'interessent, les montagnes.....et bien sur la mer
pour ce qui est de la saison, ça sera vers le mois de fervrier-mars.
j'ai besoin de conseils de personnes qui connaissent la regions, et je n'ai pas beaucoup de temps pout tout decouvrir, je suis donc preneuse de toute vos subjections, cela va m'aider à organiser un minimum ce voyage, parceque je laisse une bonne partie au hasard des rencontres........
merci à tous
Dépend de la saison. Si c'est dans l'hiver austral (été chez nous), laisse tomber totalement la NZ et concentre-toi sur les régions chaudes de l'Australie (déserts, Nord, Queensland).
Si c'est en été austral, Fjordland + peut-être Mont Cook sur l'île du Sud. Si tu apprécies les volcans, la randonnée de 3 jours au Mt Tongariro + évt Mt Taranaki, sur l'île Nord est une alternative.
Coucou !
Je suis en Nouvelle Zélande tout de suite, j'ai fait le sud et un peu du Nord.
Je tiens un carnet de voyage sur internet, je t'invite à me le demander sur mon mail perso si tu veux avoir des récits et photos, et te faire ainsi ta propre idée. Je crois que ce sera le plus simple pour toi !!
Les deux iles sont COMPLETEMENT différentes... Rien à voir !
A bientot
julien
bjr...
si t'es fan de volcans l'ile du nord me parait mieux.... rotorua et la region de taupo te plairont (geyser spa boue en ebulition ...) sinon ya tongario, c'est le mt Ruapehu qui est genial ...ya aussi white island.... plus au nord
L'ile du sud est a mon avis plus sauvage et les montagnes sont extra wanaka kaikoura.... il faut aimer marcher c'est tout....
Préparez votre voyage avec http://kiwiland.over-blog.com/
bonjour
je te conseille pour une semaine en Nelle Zélande de te cantonner à l'île du Nord, si tu veux aller dans le sud, il te faudra prendre l'avion pour gagner du temps et c'est vrai que dans le nord, il y a de beaux endroits aussi Rotorua......au nord ouest tu trouveras des plages de rêves....la Nelle Zélande est un endroit magnifique pour la personne qui aime la nature, tu vas être servi et le peuple est génial, déjà à l'aéroport on te souhaite la bienvenue et on te tend un chariot. Par contre bien nettoyer ton matériel de camping, chaussures de marche......car ils font trés attention à ce que les touristes ne transportent pas avec eux des parasites avec leurs bagages.
Je suis sûr que tu vas en avoir plein les yeux de toutes les merveilles que ce monde te proposera sur ta route du TDM
Hélène
Il est important de percevoir combien votre propre bonheur est lié à celui des autres.
Il n'existe pas de bonheur individuel totalement indépendant d'autrui
Dalai¨Lama
merci pour vos conseils.vous me donnez tellement envie de visiter ce pays, que je me demande si je ne vais pas reduire ma visite en australie, pour gagner plus de temps en NZ.
d'après vos temoignages, si je ne reste pas longtemps, il vaut mieux l'ile du nord, je vais peut-etre choisir cette solution, et après voir sur place......
Bonjour Ilham36
Pour l'australie, il y a des incontournables à faire : la barrière de corail, Ayers rocks, Sydney ( belle ville, agréable et tu peux te promener à pied ), cape tribulation et Perth si tu en as le temps et au sud de Melbourner " Great Ocean road "
La Nelle Zélande, dans le Pacifique, on l'appelle " la petite Europe du Pacifique ", c'est bien sûr quand on est sur place que l'on se fait vraiment une idée si on veut rester plus de temps à un endroit, il faut que ton billet soit flexible ( c'est à dire que tu puisses changer de dates sur tes billets, même si tu dois payer un petit supplément )
A+
Il est important de percevoir combien votre propre bonheur est lié à celui des autres.
Il n'existe pas de bonheur individuel totalement indépendant d'autrui
Dalai¨Lama
salut a toi
alors pour l'oz comme on dit, voila ce que je te propose. en express hein, mais le best a mon avis.
PAs la barriere si t'aimes pas la plongee (ca, tu y as deja pense je suppose).
Tu peux faire : Sydney. 2 jours maxi.fais les musees nationaux et les galleries, bcp sont gratuits.
Avion Melbourne, ds le sud, d'ou tu peux faire en mini-bus le Great Ocean ROad. Ou en voiture si veux louer, c'est mieux. Les Twelve Apostles. absolument a faire. a melbourne, mange un souvlaki ds un truc grec, miam.
Train jusqu'a Alice Springs ds le centre (train, une bonne journee, ou avion, depend du budget). Et la, pas faire Rainbow Valley (perte de temps). mais te concentrer sur Uluru et les magnifiques Kata Tjuta. Ca, en 5 jours c'est boucle. Je te conseille de faire le tour de Uluru avec un(e) ranger qui explique tout, bien mieux que de le monter (et par la, tu respectes les Aborigenes qui te demandent de pas monter).
si tu veux pousser jusque ds le Nord, tu peux faire le Best du kakadu National Park en 4 jours.
tout ca, je l'ai fait en tour organise (seule et jeune a l'epoque, et sans permis de voiture, et pressee par le temps). Attention a ne pas prendre de tours appeles "Unleashed", c'est trop dur physiquement pour ceux qui ne sont pas trop sportifs. ca coute plus cher les trucs organises, mais bon, au moins c'est le mieux en un temps bien calibre.
Mais moi j'y retourne en Decembre et je compte faire ca et plus, en bus voiture etc, sans passer par les tours. Mais je connais deja, donc je sais quoi eliminer. et puis j'ai pas de limite de temps.
En esperant que cela t'aura aide. Niveau meteo je suis un peu paumee, j'ai pas de conseil. Il fera beau a Sydney et Melbourne, meme chaud. Ds le desert, ca ira. Froid la nuit, attention.!!! Et ds le kakadu, j'ai aucune idee pour fevrier.
bon, et si t'as des infos sur les pays suivants, trucs a pas louper, moi je pars en tour d'Asie bientot, donc je collecte les infos, meme si je pense le faire au feeling : Vietnam, Cambodge, Thailande, Malaisie.
A bientot aurelie
PAs la barriere si t'aimes pas la plongee (ca, tu y as deja pense je suppose).
Tu peux faire : Sydney. 2 jours maxi.fais les musees nationaux et les galleries, bcp sont gratuits.
Avion Melbourne, ds le sud, d'ou tu peux faire en mini-bus le Great Ocean ROad. Ou en voiture si veux louer, c'est mieux. Les Twelve Apostles. absolument a faire. a melbourne, mange un souvlaki ds un truc grec, miam.
Train jusqu'a Alice Springs ds le centre (train, une bonne journee, ou avion, depend du budget). Et la, pas faire Rainbow Valley (perte de temps). mais te concentrer sur Uluru et les magnifiques Kata Tjuta. Ca, en 5 jours c'est boucle. Je te conseille de faire le tour de Uluru avec un(e) ranger qui explique tout, bien mieux que de le monter (et par la, tu respectes les Aborigenes qui te demandent de pas monter).
si tu veux pousser jusque ds le Nord, tu peux faire le Best du kakadu National Park en 4 jours.
tout ca, je l'ai fait en tour organise (seule et jeune a l'epoque, et sans permis de voiture, et pressee par le temps). Attention a ne pas prendre de tours appeles "Unleashed", c'est trop dur physiquement pour ceux qui ne sont pas trop sportifs. ca coute plus cher les trucs organises, mais bon, au moins c'est le mieux en un temps bien calibre.
Mais moi j'y retourne en Decembre et je compte faire ca et plus, en bus voiture etc, sans passer par les tours. Mais je connais deja, donc je sais quoi eliminer. et puis j'ai pas de limite de temps.
En esperant que cela t'aura aide. Niveau meteo je suis un peu paumee, j'ai pas de conseil. Il fera beau a Sydney et Melbourne, meme chaud. Ds le desert, ca ira. Froid la nuit, attention.!!! Et ds le kakadu, j'ai aucune idee pour fevrier.
bon, et si t'as des infos sur les pays suivants, trucs a pas louper, moi je pars en tour d'Asie bientot, donc je collecte les infos, meme si je pense le faire au feeling : Vietnam, Cambodge, Thailande, Malaisie.
A bientot aurelie
Traitons autrui comme nous aimerions qu'il nous traite.
merci aurelie.
une petite question:je n'ai pas encore pris mon billet(peut-etre demain!)n'est-il pas preferable de prendre l'avion jusqu'à cairns(depuis bali)et descedre à sydney par le train?de cette façon je ne fais pas marche arrière, et je visite au passage à chaque fois, sans perdre du temps à faire des aller-retour!
coucou
si si, t'as raison, c'est une bonne idee ca, ... pour le train, doit pas y avoir gd choix, mais le bus, ca ira je pense. Pense a Air ASia (www.airasia.com ), Virgin Blue, Flight Centre, pour tes billets d'avion... bcp moins cher !
Bon courage et magnifique voyage a toi. Aurelie
si si, t'as raison, c'est une bonne idee ca, ... pour le train, doit pas y avoir gd choix, mais le bus, ca ira je pense. Pense a Air ASia (www.airasia.com ), Virgin Blue, Flight Centre, pour tes billets d'avion... bcp moins cher !
Bon courage et magnifique voyage a toi. Aurelie
Traitons autrui comme nous aimerions qu'il nous traite.
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My main issue is transport to cover all of this.
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As for trains, they’re not really an option for our stay in New South Wales. In Queensland, I found the Queensland Rail Travel website with a Brisbane–Cairns line, but trains don’t run every day.
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Hello!
I’m planning a solo trip from April 16th to June 2nd!
I have to work for 3 weeks in Papeete when I arrive in French Polynesia, so I can only explore on the weekends (3-day weekends). For my first weekend, I’ll visit Tahiti; my second weekend will be dedicated to Moorea, and the last weekend to Huahine.
After my work period, I’ll continue with my vacation and keep exploring:
Maupiti - 4 nights
Raiatea - 3 nights (including a day trip to Tahaa)
Bora Bora - 3 nights
Rangiroa - 4 nights (could do 3)
Tikehau - 2 nights (could do 3)
Fakarava - 3 nights
For activities, I’m mostly interested in discovering the islands, hiking, and observing wildlife.
I’m not a diver, but I plan to do a beginner’s dive once I’m there. I love snorkeling, though, and I’m wondering if I’m spending too much time in the Tuamotus, which are famous for diving from what I’ve seen.
For travel between the islands, I’ve already looked into the Bora Tuamotu Max pass, which seems like the best option, but I’d love advice on replacing it with one or more ferries.
What do you think? I’m struggling to finalize my itinerary.
Can’t wait to read your replies!
Thanks!!
Celia
I’m planning a solo trip from April 16th to June 2nd!
I have to work for 3 weeks in Papeete when I arrive in French Polynesia, so I can only explore on the weekends (3-day weekends). For my first weekend, I’ll visit Tahiti; my second weekend will be dedicated to Moorea, and the last weekend to Huahine.
After my work period, I’ll continue with my vacation and keep exploring:
Maupiti - 4 nights
Raiatea - 3 nights (including a day trip to Tahaa)
Bora Bora - 3 nights
Rangiroa - 4 nights (could do 3)
Tikehau - 2 nights (could do 3)
Fakarava - 3 nights
For activities, I’m mostly interested in discovering the islands, hiking, and observing wildlife.
I’m not a diver, but I plan to do a beginner’s dive once I’m there. I love snorkeling, though, and I’m wondering if I’m spending too much time in the Tuamotus, which are famous for diving from what I’ve seen.
For travel between the islands, I’ve already looked into the Bora Tuamotu Max pass, which seems like the best option, but I’d love advice on replacing it with one or more ferries.
What do you think? I’m struggling to finalize my itinerary.
Can’t wait to read your replies!
Thanks!!
Celia
We’ll be in Adelaide from February 24th to March 4th and we’d like to spend 3 days and 2 nights on Kangaroo Island.
Any recommendations?
We always travel with simple accommodations
Hi everyone, we're heading to Australia next month. We have 7 days to go from Adelaide to Melbourne via the Great Ocean Road. Should we visit Kangaroo Island or not? We can't decide! Thanks for your advice.
We really want to see kangaroos and koalas in their natural habitat.
We really want to see kangaroos and koalas in their natural habitat.
Hi everyone,
I’m heading to NZ at the end of January.
It’s peak season—do you think it’s necessary to book activities in advance (like a cruise to Milford Sound), or is it not essential?
Thanks
We’ll be in New Zealand starting March 15th. We’re considering renting a car from Christchurch to Auckland. We’ve read that a lot of ferries have been canceled—is that true? Would it be better to rent one car in the South Island and another in the North Island? Thanks, and happy New Year!
Hi,
When I hear our French friends talk about them, they’re the most beautiful islands in the world.
For those of you who’ve traveled extensively, is that really the case?
Are the prices for accommodation, even basic ones, justified? Isn’t a room in a family-run guesthouse at 150/200 € a bit much?
Are there other islands in Polynesia (non-French) that are just as "paradise-like" but more affordable?
I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Hi everyone,
A quick introduction. I'm 27, I live in Picardy, and I'm getting married in 2017. We'd like to spend our honeymoon in French Polynesia for 3 weeks.
I'm open to all kinds of advice!!!
I think we'll use a travel agency because our work schedules don't leave us much time to organize the trip... Unless I change my mind! ;-)
But we don’t want our trip to turn into tourist clichés—we really don’t like that. That said, we *do* want to see those postcard-perfect beaches and landscapes!
We don’t dive, but I think we’ll try a beginner’s dive, and maybe even get our Level 1 certification, depending on how it goes (I read some comments about it on this forum).
Anyway, I’m looking for any information and internet links to make this trip a success.
This is THE trip of a lifetime, and it has to be perfect!
Thanks for your help!
I’m also checking out the different threads about Polynesia on this forum ;-)
Hi everyone,
What great news to read that Voyage Forum is back up and running—I’m so happy! 🙂 I need some advice for a trip we’re planning in 2025: New Caledonia and Australia.
We’ll arrive in Australia on September 1, 2025, and the plan is to spend 2 nights in Melbourne to explore the city, then rent a car to drive from Melbourne to Sydney, where we’ll arrive on September 12. Unfortunately, we won’t have time for the Great Ocean Road
I’ve checked several blogs for this route and here’s the itinerary I’ve put together:
9/4: Melbourne to Philip Island (140 km) – 1 night 9/5: Philip Island to Wilsons Promontory National Park – 2 nights 9/7: Raymond Island (free ferry to cross a 200 m sea channel) – Lakes Entrance – 1 night 9/8: Drive to Narooma (stop at Quarry Beach) – 1 night at "Bodalla Park Forest Rest Area" 9/9: Batemans Bay – Pebbly Beach – Dolphin Point – Jervis Bay – 1 night (to be found) 9/10: Jervis Bay and surroundings – 1 night at Bendeela Picnic Area 9/11: Blue Mountains National Park (1 hour from Sydney) – 1 night (to be found) 9/12: Arrival in Sydney
I know we won’t be able to see everything, and this 9-day route is just a starting point. The goal is to avoid rushing—if we see a place we like, we’ll stop, even if it means seeing less. A vacation where we don’t watch the clock too much! 🙂 Does this route (a mix of several blogs where not all stops are noted) seem realistic or too ambitious? Are there certain spots that are more worth prioritizing over the ones I’ve listed? For example, in one of the blogs I read, travelers skipped Blue Mountains National Park because they chose another site (which I’ve forgotten 😎).
For accommodation, we’ll likely be camping (free or paid), so if you have any suggestions, I’d love to hear them! 😎
Our arrival in Sydney on September 12 depends on my hope to participate in the marathon on September 15, 2025. After that, we’ll leave Sydney on September 17 for Ayers Rock.
Thanks in advance for your tips and ideas—it’s always tricky to plan a route from a distance when time is limited.
And long live this site, which I’ve missed so much since 2020! 😎🙂
We’ll arrive in Australia on September 1, 2025, and the plan is to spend 2 nights in Melbourne to explore the city, then rent a car to drive from Melbourne to Sydney, where we’ll arrive on September 12. Unfortunately, we won’t have time for the Great Ocean Road
I’ve checked several blogs for this route and here’s the itinerary I’ve put together:
9/4: Melbourne to Philip Island (140 km) – 1 night 9/5: Philip Island to Wilsons Promontory National Park – 2 nights 9/7: Raymond Island (free ferry to cross a 200 m sea channel) – Lakes Entrance – 1 night 9/8: Drive to Narooma (stop at Quarry Beach) – 1 night at "Bodalla Park Forest Rest Area" 9/9: Batemans Bay – Pebbly Beach – Dolphin Point – Jervis Bay – 1 night (to be found) 9/10: Jervis Bay and surroundings – 1 night at Bendeela Picnic Area 9/11: Blue Mountains National Park (1 hour from Sydney) – 1 night (to be found) 9/12: Arrival in Sydney
I know we won’t be able to see everything, and this 9-day route is just a starting point. The goal is to avoid rushing—if we see a place we like, we’ll stop, even if it means seeing less. A vacation where we don’t watch the clock too much! 🙂 Does this route (a mix of several blogs where not all stops are noted) seem realistic or too ambitious? Are there certain spots that are more worth prioritizing over the ones I’ve listed? For example, in one of the blogs I read, travelers skipped Blue Mountains National Park because they chose another site (which I’ve forgotten 😎).
For accommodation, we’ll likely be camping (free or paid), so if you have any suggestions, I’d love to hear them! 😎
Our arrival in Sydney on September 12 depends on my hope to participate in the marathon on September 15, 2025. After that, we’ll leave Sydney on September 17 for Ayers Rock.
Thanks in advance for your tips and ideas—it’s always tricky to plan a route from a distance when time is limited.
And long live this site, which I’ve missed so much since 2020! 😎🙂





