Kiama to Jervis Bay
Your 80km drive south to Jervis Bay takes you to a haven of powdery sand coves, sapphire seas and resident dolphins in the 215-square-kilometre Jervis Bay Marine Park. This watery wonderland is also home to seals, penguins and migrating whales (May to November). Take in the spectacle with Dive Jervis Bay, offering scuba and snorkelling expeditions to more than 60 locations. Meanwhile, Jervis Bay Wild and Dolphin Watch Cruises Jervis Bay get you close to marine life while you stay dry. Most wildlife cruises depart from Huskisson.
Discover some of the most dazzlingly white beaches in the world on the White Sands Walk, a 90-minute loop linking Vincentia and Greenfield Beach. Or wander the trails through Booderee National Park, covering the southern curve of Jervis Bay, its expanse uniting powdery sand beaches and jagged cliffs. Along trails, spot some of the 460 native plants that characterise the landscape, many of them important sources of food and medicine to the Aboriginal community. On Booderee’s south coast, Cave Beach is particularly popular among surfers, who come for the waves, then linger for the chance of glimpsing dolphins and fur seals in the water and echidnas on land.
There are plenty of holiday homes to rent in the area, not to mention beachside campgrounds where you’ll be lulled to sleep by the sound of the waves. For a luxurious stay, Paperbark Camp offers gorgeous safari-style tents among a forest of eucalyptus and paperbarks; the fine-dining restaurant here serves a three-course set menu by candlelight.
Jervis Bay to Sydney via Berrima
As wonderful as the coastal route is, your inland journey home through the Southern Highlands is just as memorable. It’s a two-hour drive northwest to Berrima, Australia’s best-preserved Georgian town. Today, the historic sandstone buildings here are home to antiques stores and cafes, not to mention the Surveyor General Inn (the country’s oldest continuously licensed pub) and Berrima Vault House, a boutique hotel, members’ club and lifestyle store in a historic building hand-made by convicts in 1844. (Note: Berrima Vault House opens in May 2021.)
Just around the corner is another establishment to sample the region’s food and wine, with PepperGreen Estate offering flights of the cool-climate vintages it makes here (this is the closest wine region to Sydney). More wine awaits on the outskirts of town at Bendooley Estate, its grand Georgian homestead and stables enveloped by manicured gardens and vines. It’s certainly one of the prettiest places in the highlands to enjoy a glass of chardonnay or shiraz. Move from the cellar door into the estate’s Berkelouw Bookstore, which specialises in rare tomes, then the restaurant for a farm-to-table meal.
If you’re in town on a Sunday, you might alternatively consider lunch at The Loch: once a week, this working farm showcases the bounty of produce grown and raised here via a hearty meal. The menu changes fortnightly, to reflect what’s in season, and you can tour the gardens to learn where your meal comes from. You can also visit on other days and stock up on fruit, vegetables and flowers to take home.
From here, it’s another 90-minute drive northeast back to Sydney.