Great Ocean Road
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 1,249
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Great Ocean Road
We (two of us) are looking at driving the Great Ocean Road from Melbourne to Adelaide. The internet has many recommended itineraries, and they all have different overnight stops. I'm researching the possibilities online, checking things to do, good walks, good dining, and so on; but I need advice about the last leg(s) of the journey especially - between Mount Gambier and Adelaide. It seems too far to do it all in one day (or is it?), and if I look for an approximate midway point to break the journey overnight, the choices seem to be Kingston S.E. or Bordertown or Keith. Can anyone give me a rundown on these places and the differences between them, or suggest other perhaps better possibilities? Thanks for any help...
#2
Google tells me that the most direct route from Mount Gambier to Adelaide is about 4.5 hours, 435 km. But who wants to do that?
We made this drive during a trip to South Australia many moons ago so I'm rather rusty, but I'd suggest a stop in the pretty seaside town of Robe.
Here's my trip report from our visit in 2014 - it might give you a few ideas.
So much good wine, so little time; South Australia's Limestone Coast
We made this drive during a trip to South Australia many moons ago so I'm rather rusty, but I'd suggest a stop in the pretty seaside town of Robe.
Here's my trip report from our visit in 2014 - it might give you a few ideas.
So much good wine, so little time; South Australia's Limestone Coast
Last edited by Melnq8; Mar 1st, 2022 at 06:41 AM.
#3
The coast journey should be nicer but slower than the highway between Mt Gambier and Adelaide. If you want a feel for how large the towns are that you mention, or what there is to do, try checking each town on Trip Advisor. It should tell you the number of motels, number of places to eat and what there is to do. If you can't find the town listed on TA at all, that means it's tiny.
We find the timing for travel on Google Maps to be very optimistic. It always takes us hours longer. I guess Google doesn't take into account the toilet stops, slow traffic, roadworks where the speed limit is 40km, stopping for lunch, etc etc.
We find the timing for travel on Google Maps to be very optimistic. It always takes us hours longer. I guess Google doesn't take into account the toilet stops, slow traffic, roadworks where the speed limit is 40km, stopping for lunch, etc etc.
Thread
Original Poster
Forum
Replies
Last Post
puttakka
Australia & the Pacific
5
Sep 23rd, 2010 04:33 AM
Effy
Australia & the Pacific
4
Apr 6th, 2004 09:00 PM
British
Australia & the Pacific
15
Jan 31st, 2004 03:48 PM
Tomi
United States
5
Jul 22nd, 1998 11:32 AM