This remarkable Red Centre road trip was nothing like I expected

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A mother-daughter road trip through the heart of Central Australia uncovers a landscape deeper than its red dirt reveals. 

The Northern Territory is a place that stirs something tender within. A familiarity without a memory. A near-unconscious shift that began when my mum and I arrived in the Northern Territory just four days ago for the road trip of a lifetime. 

It roused softly as I pushed down on the accelerator of my recently acquired rental, a 2022 Toyota Prado, heading out of Alice Springs and into the blissful unknown promised by Larapinta Drive. The slight intimidation I felt upon climbing into the car back at Alice Springs Airport melts away as I clock 110kph on the speedometer – a pace we’re told to maintain if we want to make it to our destination before nightfall.  

The Mereenie Loop is a breathtaking road trip through the Red Centre that delivers rugged ranges, serene gorges and unforgettable memories.

“You’ll want to be on the Mereenie Loop by 1pm at the latest to avoid any driving after dark," the receptionist at the Alice Springs Visitor Centre had told us when we arrived to purchase the required driving permit earlier that morning. She circled Discovery Resorts Kings Canyon on a fold-out map before handing it to us. “You won’t have any service out there, so don’t lose it," she winked. Mum and I had laughed, hoping she didn’t catch the brief but furtive glance we’d shared. 

a car driving along Red Centre; Kings Canyon/Watarrka
Hit the bitumen to truly experience the Red Centre; Kings Canyon/Watarrka is home to some of the country’s most mesmerising views. (Image: Tourism NT/Sam Earp)

The Prado’s mammoth exterior is far from my trusty Subaru Forester back home, but there’s something exhilarating about being so high off the road, the car’s suspension specifically designed to take the brunt of each bump in the bitumen. I try not to let the unfamiliar landscape beginning to unravel itself around us distract from my focus on the road. But the towering topography, dotted with ancient rock formations and awash in an ink pot of all-new colours, makes it almost impossible for my easily distracted eyes to look only ahead.  

Towering rock faces of Standley Chasm

a group exploring Standley Chasm on a cultural tour
Join a cultural tour of Standley Chasm. (Image: Tourism NT/Lola and Jira)

Just over 45 minutes in and the unmistakable font of a dilapidated green sign offers a welcome break. And after a quick detour, we’re pulling into the car park of Standley Chasm/Angkerle Atwatye. Owned and operated by the land’s Traditional Owners, the Western Arrernte People, this 80-metre-tall gorge is accessed via a 2.4-kilometre walking trail.  

We hustle for some happy snaps between the towering rock faces, torn between drinking in its beauty and scurrying back to the car to escape the outback’s unrelenting fly population. These are not the buzzy locals we were hoping to meet; unaware that the flies are, to put it politely, a nuisance at this time of year. Unsurprisingly, the netted hats worn by other tourists seem to be sold out everywhere.  

But my mum, ever the innovator, comes up with a solution. Handing me a dried-out and long-discarded eucalyptus branch, she coolly swings her own from one shoulder, around her face and to the other in one swift motion, swatting any particularly intrusive flies aside in doing so. She dubs it the ‘NT wave’ and it becomes our saving grace. 

Hiking the Kings Canyon Rim Walk

the sandstone domes of Kings Canyon/Watarrka
The sandstone domes of Kings Canyon/Watarrka glow golden in the sun. (Image: Tourism NT)

“Put me in a classroom, teachers will tell you I’m too shy and quiet. But put me out here, and I can talk for hours," says Luke Fraser, gazing out over the ancient sandstone domes and crevasses of Kings Canyon on the Traditional Lands of the Arrernte and Luritja Peoples.  

The 22-year-old, originally from Sydney, has only been in the Northern Territory for three months, working as a tour guide for guests of Discovery Resorts – Kings Canyon along its signature Kings Canyon Rim Walk. But I can tell from the look on his face, this golden landscape already feels like home. 

two women traversing the Kings Canyon Rim Walk
Which takes roughly four hours to complete. (Image: Tourism NT)

Despite Luke’s evident passion for the job, he has clearly been bitten by the travel bug, and his desire to explore this plentiful land will see him moving on to another part of Australia soon. Jake Fowler, who only arrived here from Western Australia’s Coral Coast two weeks ago, will be taking his place as tour guide through the 400-million-year-old canyon. Luke’s eagerness to share his impressive breadth of knowledge, most of which he learnt during time he volunteered to spend on Country with Matutjara man Terence Stephen Clyne, is evident.  

The young man is clearly a natural leader, but is also proving to be a brilliant teacher, gently stepping back so Jake can practise before guiding groups of his own in the coming weeks. The pair seem to strike the perfect balance, Luke’s detailed descriptions, punctuated with personal insight and unwavering enthusiasm, coupled with Jake’s dry humour and penchant for sarcasm, make the four-hour hike seem too short.  

It’s a shame the two can’t run tours together officially, but I consider myself lucky enough to tag along for the informal handover, growing increasingly fond of – and entertained by – the dynamic duo as our morning hike around Kings Canyon continues.  

Tackling the Mereenie Loop

swimming at Ormiston Gorge, West MacDonnell Ranges
Detour for a cooling dip at Ormiston Gorge. (Image: Tourism NT/Daniel Tran)

Mum’s makeshift fly swatter comes in especially handy during our guided Rim Walk, much to the amusement of Luke and Jake. We laugh about it over post-hike beers and pizza at Kings Canyon Bar & Grill, the resort’s onsite pub and the only venue of its kind for hundreds of kilometres.  

The four of us are an unlikely crew – two newly acquainted coworkers brought together by a four-hour training session and a mother-daughter duo visiting from Sydney. But the conversation flows and the energy is effortless. We sip on cans of stout from Alice Springs Brewery and swap a lifetime of stories, from the educational to the emotional and the downright embarrassing.  

I blush a shade similar to the red dirt outside as Mum tells of our drive to Kings Canyon the day before. We’d hit the road from Discovery Parks – Alice Springs bright and early, guided by our fold-out map, no GPS signal and a misplaced sense of direction, which had us veering off-course after Standley Chasm. It was a mistake only realised 104 kilometres later, when the road sign for Ormiston Gorge, our next stop, didn’t appear. We’d looped the loop the wrong way, and with our deadline looming, decided to push on, earmarking the gorge for our journey back. 

My embarrassment intensifies as Mum continues to recount our journey along the Mereenie Loop, the roughly 150 final kilometres of unsealed road to Discovery Resorts Kings Canyon. Here, the smooth asphalt of Larapinta Drive is replaced with corrugated dirt, generously sprinkled with soft-sand deposits, hidden potholes and steep floodways.  

As a first-time 4WD-er, I’d struggled to find the right gear, turning a typically 2.5-hour drive into a four-hour comedy of errors. While it meant full bladders, sore bums and a few choice expletives shared along the way, the slow journey allowed us to soak in the landscape around us. It’s ironic, the sense of belonging I felt being so far from home. Not knowing if I’m going in the right direction. Not quite sure of our destination. Yet, as we chased the sun towards the horizon, the last emotion I felt was fear. This land has been so kind to us, why would it stop now? In the end, we managed to make it before nightfall – just. 

A helicopter flight over Kings Canyon

Kings Canyon from above
Hikers look like ants from above the Canyon. (Image: Tourism NT/Lola and Jira)

Despite the freestanding bathtub in our Deluxe Cabin calling my name, I clamber into the helicopter, wishing I’d gone a little easier on the pizza. It’s an experience neither Mum nor I have had before, I tell our jovial pilot Cal Hodgson as he prepares for take-off. “Oh, it’s your first time? Me too! Now quiet for a second, I need to figure out how to fly this thing."  

Cal’s witticisms are peppered throughout the commentary he delivers during our 15-minute joyride, the practised ease of his tone signalling he has, in fact, flown the helicopter before.

He loops the chopper over the canyon Mum and I had tackled just hours earlier, hikers now the size of ants among the massive mounds and chasms, before smoothly guiding us off the flat-topped peak of Carmichael Crag, a sacred site from a local Luritja Dreamtime story.  

a helicopter tourover Kings Canyon/Watarrka
A scenic helicopter flight over Kings Canyon/Watarrka offers a new perspective. (Image: Tourism NT/Matt Glastonbury)

Despite Cal’s insistence that “on a clear day, you can spot Uluru on the horizon," cloud cover prevents a sighting of the ancient monolith some 200 kilometres away as the crow flies. “You’ll just have to come back to the NT so you can see it in person," he smiles, dipping the helicopter back towards the resort. 

Seeing rainfall in the heart of Australia

It’s a trip I’m already mapping out in my head as Jake and Luke fiddle over the Prado the next morning. After a quick lesson in 4WD-ing from Jake and another moment of mortification for myself – “You don’t need to press anything, the car will switch over automatically," – they’re waving us off.  

As we often do, Mum and I swap a quick look to clock the situation, neither of us surprised to catch the other blinking back tears. Our new friends will be missed. Our memories will fade. But an intangible tether remains.  

There’s an undeniable pull to this place, a magnetism that clings to you with quiet intensity and anchors itself in your soul long before you’re even aware. It’s only upon leaving you realise that the land holds more than its arid surface could ever reveal, understood not with the eyes but with the heart.  

The difference between our entry and exit from Kings Canyon is instantaneously obvious, the car’s speedometer continuing to tick over smoothly as we hit unsealed road. Just when a comfortable silence has settled between us, interposed only by a few small sniffles and the rustling of a freshly opened lolly packet, a sharp, unfamiliar sound causes both of us to jump.  

Before we can catastrophise a flat tyre into existence, the noise increases in frequency and I steer the Prado to the side of the road, hazard lights on for good measure. We watch, in awe, as fat droplets of rain hit the dehydrated earth around us, small rivulets making patterns through the red dust that has accumulated on the car’s white bonnet. It’s a typically dry month in Central Australia, yet the sky has opened to weep with us – proof that this ancient land feels those who pass through it, too. 

A traveller’s checklist

Getting there

Fly direct to Alice Springs/Mparntwe from most Australian capital cities with Qantas and Virgin Australia. Hire cars are available at the airport.

Staying there

a glamping tent at Discovery Resorts – Kings Canyon
Bed down in a glamping tent at Discovery Resorts – Kings Canyon. (Image: Tourism NT/Lola and Jira)

Stay at Discovery Resorts – Kings Canyon for easy access to Watarrka National Park. Discovery Parks – Alice Springs offers convenient facilities close to town.

Eating there

Under A Desert Moon dining experience at Discovery Resorts – Kings Canyon
Feast by firelight with an Under A Desert Moon dining experience. (Image: Tourism NT/Ray Reyes)

Enjoy a burger and a beer at Alice Springs Brewery . Or a five-course meal paired with premium wines with Discovery Resorts – Kings Canyon’s Under a Desert Moon outdoor dining experience.

Playing there

the Light-Towers by Bruce Munro at Kings Canyon
Light-Towers by Bruce Munro pulses in response to its own soundtrack by composer Orlando Gough. (Image: Tourism NT/Ray Reyes)

The Kings Canyon Rim Walk is a six-kilometre loop, taking roughly four hours to complete. It starts with a steep climb, so plenty of water, good hiking shoes, a hat and sunscreen are a must. It’s best done early to avoid the heat. See Light-Towers by Bruce Munro at Discovery Resorts – Kings Canyon. Get a different perspective of the landscape during a helicopter flight with PHS (Professional Helicopter Services) .

Taylah Darnell
Taylah Darnell is Australian Traveller's Writer & Producer. She has been passionate about writing since she learnt to read, spending many hours either lost in the pages of books or attempting to write her own. This life-long love of words inspired her to study a Bachelor of Communication majoring in Creative Writing at the University of Technology Sydney, where she completed two editorial internships. She began her full-time career in publishing at Ocean Media before scoring her dream job with Australian Traveller. Now as Writer & Producer, Taylah passionately works across both digital platforms and print titles. When she's not wielding a red pen over magazine proofs, you can find Taylah among the aisles of a second-hand bookshop, following a good nature trail or cheering on her EPL team at 3am. While she's keen to visit places like Norway and New Zealand, her favourite place to explore will forever be her homeland.
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8 experiences to restart and inspire your senses for 2026

    Katie DundasBy Katie Dundas
    Be invigorated by the sights, sounds and landscapes of the Northern Territory.

    If your 2026 travel goals focus on visiting inspiring and meaningful destinations, look no further than the Northern Territory. Rich in Indigenous culture, national parks and unique local cuisine, a journey deep into the Red Centre and Top End will awaken all your senses and leave you with lifelong memories. But you don’t need to do it on your own, as AAT Kings’ Small Group tours offer expertly led itineraries. They’re designed to take the guesswork out of travel planning and help you access remote regions in comfort while connecting with fellow guests, allowing you to delve deeper into destinations with insights from knowledgeable Travel Directors and local Indigenous guides.

    As Small Group tours with AAT Kings have an average of just 16 guests, there’s ample opportunity to ask questions and make meaningful connections on every visit. Here are just a few of the experiences on offer, with adventures designed to invigorate every sense.

    1. Under a Desert Moon dinner

    Under a Desert Moon dinner in northern territory
    Watch the stars come out over five courses.

    Over five courses, dine under the stars during an unforgettable Outback dining experience. As day fades to night, lit only by the moon and the crackling fire, this outdoor dinner features locally sourced seasonal produce, matched with Australian wines.

    It’s an intimate experience, showcasing the quiet grandeur of the Outback after nightfall. As you dine, feel connected to the land and its unique flavours, introduced by your impeccable waitstaff.

    Part of the Northern Territory Dreaming tour, the Under a Desert Moon dinner is the ideal way to connect with your small group of fellow travellers after an invigorating day in the Red Centre.

    2. Karrke Aboriginal Cultural Experience

    Karrke Aboriginal Cultural Experience
    Learn stories of the Red Centre at Karrke. (Image: Tourism & Events NT/ 75vibes)

    The best way to learn the stories of the Red Centre is by connecting with the land’s Traditional Owners. At the Karrke Aboriginal Cultural Experience, visited on AAT Kings Northern Territory Dreaming and Outback Contrasts tours, you’ll meet with members of the local Wanmarra community in Kings Canyon.

    On this immersive AAT Kings MAKE TRAVEL MATTER® Experience you’ll walk on Country to learn firsthand about bush tucker, Indigenous medicine, wooden artefacts and the art of dot painting. Passionate guides will share stories that have been passed down for generations.

    3. Kungkas Can Cook

    Kungkas Can Cook set up at Simpson's Gap
    Taste local bush delicacies. (Image: Tourism & Events NT/ Mel Brautigam)

    The powerful senses of smell and taste are awakened on this exclusive experience led by Indigenous chef Rayleen Brown. Included in the Northern Territory Dreaming and Outback Contrasts tours, this is a unique opportunity to savour local bush delicacies and learn about Indigenous culture through the lens of food.

    Brown, a recipe author and guest judge for MasterChef Australia, works solely with native ingredients directly harvested by women from the Alice Springs community. It’s a 100 per cent Indigenous owned and run business.

    4. Karlu Karlu (Devils Marbles)

    woman walking by Karlu Karlu (Devils Marbles)
    See striking Karlu Karlu. (Image: Tourism & Events NT/ Dom And Jesso)

    Appearing out of nowhere, the huge granite boulders of Karlu Karlu seem to precariously balance on the barren Outback landscape. You’ll come across these geological formations as you cruise the Stuart Highway on the Northern Territory Explorer tour.

    Your AAT Kings Travel Director will share expert insight on the history and culture of Karlu Karlu, recognised as a sacred site of the Warumungu people. As you walk in awe amongst these stunning formations, formed many millennia ago, you’ll hear some of the stories behind why this place is so important to Indigenous storytelling and culture.

    5. Pudakul

    Pudakul Aboriginal Cultural Tours
    Experience this family-owned Indigenous experience. (Images: Tourism & Events NT/ Helen Orr)

    Make authentic cultural connections when you visit Pudakul, a family-owned Indigenous experience on the Adelaide River Flood Plains. On your Small Group Northern Territory Explorer tour your senses will be inspired by the sounds of First Nations music, the taste of local bush tucker and the beauty of art.

    This AAT Kings MAKE TRAVEL MATTER® Experience is designed to take you deeper into the destination, helping guests learn from the people of the Limilngan-Wulna Land.

    6. Corroboree Billabong Wetland Cruise

    Corroboree Billabong Wetland Cruise
    Spot the wildlife of the billabong. (Image: Tourism & Events NT)

    Observing the unique wildlife of the Northern Territory – from formidable crocs to hearing gentle melodies from the many endemic bird species – is always one of the most memorable parts of your Northern Territory Dreaming tour.

    Travel in the comfort of your premium coach, taking in the stunning landscapes, before arriving at Corroboree Billabong. This special place is part of the Mary River Wetlands and is home to the world’s largest concentration of saltwater crocodiles. Your comfortable boat is designed to maximise wildlife viewing, giving you a front row seat to this spectacular ecosystem.

    7. Aboriginal Bush Traders

    artist at Aboriginal Bush Traders in darwin
    Visit for the art, stay for a bite. (Image: Tourism & Events NT/ Shaana McNaught)

    A visit to Aboriginal Bush Traders is the ideal introduction to the vibrant city of Darwin. This non-profit gallery, cafe and retail space supports Indigenous employment and is the perfect place to find a curated selection of ethical Indigenous gifts, including artwork and organic skincare.

    Your Northern Territory Top End National Parks and Northern Territory Dreaming tours include an exclusive native flavour tasting, offering cultural insight before travelling deeper into the Top End.

    8. Leliyn (Edith Falls)

    woman swimming in Leliyn (Edith Falls)
    Cool off at Leliyn (Edith Falls). (Image: Tourism & Events NT/ As We Wander)

    There’s something about a mighty waterfall that invigorates the soul like nothing else, with the picturesque Leliyn (Edith Falls) the perfect place to refresh on a hot day.

    On your Northern Territory Top End National Parks and Northern Territory Dreaming visit to Nitmiluk National Park, known for its epic sandstone gorges, you’ll pay a visit to the oasis that is Leliyn. It’s the ideal place for a swim, but it’s also home to ancient Indigenous rock art. And as your Travel Director will explain, it’s an impressive place of cultural significance, too.

    Make 2026 the year to discover the flavours, culture and beauty of the Northern Territory at aatkings.com.