Is the Birdsville Track suitable for caravans?

Is the Birdsville Track suitable for caravans?

Once Australia’s most hazardous stock route, the Birdsville Track is still an unsealed road but maintained so that you can travel in either a 4WD or SUV with a caravan or camper trailer. However, the road is often unpredictable and stone guards on your trailer and rear window are recommended if you’re towing.

Do you need a 4WD for Birdsville Track?

Birdsville Track Facts Road Conditions: Stony track with large pebbles (gibbers) and dry sand. Suitable For: A 4WD is recommended for driving the Birdsville Track, but 2WD with good clearance can be suitable. Fuel Availability: Mungerannie Roadhouse is about halfway along the track and has diesel and unleaded petrol.

Is Birdsville Track suitable for 2WD?

You can drive the Birdsville Track in a 2WD car, except after rain or flood. Washouts, bulldust holes and the rough road surface can damage the undercarriage of any car with low road clearance. But the Birdsville Track is graded regularly and is generally easy to drive. There are also 4WD Tagalong or bus tours.

Is the Birdsville Track a dirt road?

The Birdsville Track is a notable outback road in Australia. Originally the track was of poor quality and suitable for high-clearance four-wheel drive vehicles only, but it is now a graded dirt road and a popular tourist route. It is also used by cattle trucks carrying livestock.

Is the Birdsville Track bitumen?

The Birdsville Track from Marree to Birdsville that was once only on intrepid road travellers’ bucket-list, is also in danger of falling under bitumen, with a long-standing proposal to seal the road made famous by Outback mailman Tom Kruse.

What is there to see on the Birdsville Track?

Things To Do On the Birdsville Track

  • Experience remote living through the locals’ eyes.
  • Walk in the footsteps of Australia’s first explorers.
  • Discover the desert’s extreme ecology.
  • Find out how the Simpson Desert was formed!
  • Crazy, extreme stories about Afghan cameleers, Aboriginal rainmakers, and Drovers and more!

How good is the Birdsville Track?

Up until the 1930s only stock and camel trains would take the Birdsville track. Nowadays it has become a very popular track. As a result, the track is reasonably well maintained and generally fairly smooth. However like any outback track, its condition can change, especially after rain.

How long is the Birdsville Track?

321.2 mi
Birdsville Track/Length

Where is the Birdsville Track in South Australia?

The 517 km (321 mi) long track links Marree, a small town in northern South Australia and Birdsville in south western Queensland. This notable outback road in Australia was opened up in the 1860s. It’s surrounded by Australian deserts and is a full-scale dirt road running through some of Australia’s driest country.

How to get to Birdsville caravan park from Windorah?

ABOVE The Birdsville caravan park; you see a variety of caravans here but not all come up the Birdsville track. You can also access Birdsville on a gravel road from the east through Windorah and from the north from Bedourie on mostly sealed sections.

Is the track to Birdsville smooth or dusty?

The Birdsville Track is very stony, rough and dusty, depending on when it was graded the last time. But if you prepare your vehicles accordingly, you shouldn’t have any problems. Here are some tips for a smooth ride. Fix cupboard doors and all items in the caravan, otherwise you might have a bit of a mess when you arrive in Birdsville.

How long is the track from Birdsville to Maree?

Birdsville Track Facts Location: Birdsville to Maree (Maree is in the north-east of South Australia and Birdsville, is in the south-west of Queensland) Track Length: 517 km Road Conditions: Stony track with large pebbles (gibbers) and dry sand.