
The world class wineries of the Hunter Valley is only a short drive away from Sydney, therefore, it is a must-stop for your vacation. There are a large variety of wineries and vineyards in the area ranging from small family businesses to large multi-national operations. With so many choices, I highly recommend you arrange your trip to the Hunter Valley with a tour operator.
We took our trip with Australian Wild Escapes. They break up the 45 minute drive with an Aussie morning tea break. Our guide had a full wicker picnic basket packed with china cups for tea/coffee and freshly baked lamingtons and anzac biscuits (two traditional Aussie foods). We stopped on the outcrops of a national park, which overlooked the Warragamba Dam, which make an idyllic spot for a midmorning snack.

Our guide was very knowledgeable about the area. He took us to some of his favorite boutique wineries in the Hunter Valley. We got to admire the owners’ quaint cottage locations and taste their wines.
For lunch, our guide took us to the Bluetongue Brewery Cafe. Our lunch was scrumptious. Served family style, we passed a variety of salads and pasta around. We had a line of tasting glasses filled with reds and whites in front of us, which we drank in accordance to what was currently on our plates.
The Bluetongue is also famous for its beers; the brewery is directly next to the bar! You can order a paddle of beer to try their varieties which includes a unique alcoholic ginger beer.
There’s no better way to spend an afternoon than wining and dining in the Hunter Valley!
Have I mentioned we stayed in the Shangri-La? Yes, the international chain of luxury hotels. The name “Shangri-La” first was used by British author James Hilton to describe a fictional mystical, harmonious valley in his 1933 novel, Lost Horizons. It has since come to be synonymous with any earthly paradise with connections to exotic mysticism.





Didgeridoo is a long wooden wind instrument, which has been carved out by termites and fashioned into a musical instrument. It has many different Aboriginal names depending on the tribe and the region which they are from.The song he played us was about a hunter who tries to catch a kangaroo with a boomerang while a kookaburra sits in a tree laughing all the while. It was amazing how you can tell all the different parts through the sounds.

