Kakadu is set to undergo major upgrading of its tourism infrastructure and resources, with access to major attractions enhanced, refurbishments to tourism facilities completed, and a new format announced for the region’s showcase culinary festival, A Taste of Kakadu.
Kakadu is set to undergo major upgrading of its tourism infrastructure and resources, with access to major attractions enhanced, refurbishments to tourism facilities completed, and a new format announced for the region’s showcase culinary festival, A Taste of Kakadu.
Kakadu National Park has just experienced one of its wettest wet seasons in a decade, replenishing the region’s landscape and ensuring a memorable tourism experience for visitors during the forthcoming dry seasons, known to the local Indigenous people as Yekke (from May to June) and Wurrkeng (from June to the end of August).
With Darwin now included in the Federal Government’s 50% airfare discount scheme, Kakadu is anticipating a massive surge in interest from interstate, and the region is ready to welcome visitors with upgraded facilities and touring ideas, including:
Over the remainder of the decade, Kakadu will continue to develop its tourism potential, with the Federal Government’s recently released Kakadu Tourism Master Plan, a ten-year strategy to grow culturally appropriate tourism in the national park. The Master Plan was developed in consultation with Kakadu’s Traditional Owners, Board of Management and the tourism industry.
The plan includes a range of proposals to upgrade access to key tourism sites, enhance facilities, establishing new visitor service hubs and revitalising Jabiru as a major tourism centre, with a World Heritage visitor centre to showcase Kakadu’s significant cultural and natural values.
It also contained plans to expand Kakadu’s major events calendar focusing on increasing cultural events with local Indigenous operators, such as the Taste of Kakadu festival.
“With many interstate visitors now able to access half-price airfares to Darwin, there has never been a better time to tick Kakadu off the bucket list,” said Kakadu Tourism Chair, Rick Allert.
“We have had one of our most successful wet seasons for over a decade, and with extra incentives to visit Kakadu this year, we believe the peak dry season is going to be very popular.
“A holiday in Kakadu offers a remarkable cultural experience, with over 65,000 years of continuous human habitation, set against one of the most dramatic landscapes in Australia.
“Bookings are already significantly higher than in recent years, so we would recommend that potential visitors secure their reservations as soon as possible."
Further information: www.kakadutourism.com
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