wukalina Walk, a member of Discover Aboriginal Experiences, has been named one of TIME's 2024 World's Greatest Places.
Vetted by TIME's editors and correspondents around the world, this exclusive list features 100 extraordinary destinations to explore, stay and visit. The award by TIME is highly coveted and reaches a global audience of 120 million (via TIME's print magazine, website and socials). Editors choose with an eye towards those offering new and exciting experiences.
wukalina Walk is a multi-award winning Indigenous/palawa-owned tourism experience. Led by Aboriginal guides, the walk offers a rare window into Tasmania/lutruwita's Aboriginal culture. For the first two nights, hikers sleep at the architecturally designed standing camp, krakani lumi (resting place), in domed-ceiling huts designed to reflect the shape of the palawa shelters that once lined the east coast of Tasmania/lutruwita. The third night is spent in a beautifully repurposed and restored lightkeeper's cottage at the most northern end of larapuna (Bay of Fires).
A group of up to 10 people are led on foot by Aboriginal guides to learn about land and sea Country. wukalina guides have lived experience and thousands of generations of Ancestral connections to the knowledge they share. They share their knowledge and perspectives as they lead travellers through bushland and along the coastline of wukalina (Mt William National Park) and larapuna (Bay of Fires). Hikers learn about the colonial history of Tasmania/lutruwita, and the brutal treatment of the palawa people. But the tour highlights their resilience, strength of culture, language and the ongoing connection that the palawa community has to Country.
wukalina Walk is a proudly Blak-owned business and different to anything else offered in Tasmania, and anywhere in the world. wukalina Walk was winner of the 2023 Australian National Tourism Awards for Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Tourism Experience.
“Sharing our stories and our history on cultural homeland is an integral part of the experience,” said Clyde Mansell, Tasmanian palawa Aboriginal Elder and founder of wukalina Walk.
“It also allows us to increase employment, involve our young people and contribute to our self-determination, by creating more opportunities for the palawa community.”
“We've had comments over the years where guests have said it's changed their lives and their whole thinking about how they should relate to Aboriginal people,” said Mansell.
Discover Aboriginal Experiences is a flagship suite of extraordinary Australian Aboriginal-guided experiences. Travellers learn about and connect with the diverse histories, cultures and languages of Aboriginal peoples, which date back more than 65,000 years.
Each member in this collective is considered a leader in Aboriginal tourism, with more than 200 experiences from over 48 businesses around Australia, all led by Aboriginal guides.
Tags: #Tasmania, #seeaustralia, #walk, #timemagazine, #adventure, #history, #culture, #discoveraboriginalexperiences
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