Plan for a post-lockdown roadtrip to outback NSW

To support an expected post-lockdown surge of freedom-seeking travellers exploring the NSW outback, one of the biggest tourism businesses in far west NSW – Out of the Ordinary Outback – is offering roadtrip lovers a 10% discount on stays at two or more of their seven properties in the region.

Outback NSW is perfect for isolation, fresh air, seclusion, social distancing and escape, with an abundance of warmth, big skies and vast spaces to roam amongst. The 10% multi-property stay offer from Out of the Ordinary Outback is designed to make it easier and more affordable for roadtrippers to explore the NSW outback closer to home in ‘out of the ordinary’ times.

The open-ended offer (no booking or stay deadlines) is valid at the new Broken Hill Outback Resort, 14 km outside the historic city, as well as The Argent Motel and The Tourist Lodge – both in Broken Hill, the Copper City Motel/Hotel in Cobar, the billabong-side cabins at Warrawong on the Darling at Wilcannia, the remote Ivanhoe Hotel Motel and the famous White Cliffs Underground Motel – Australia’s largest underground accommodation.

Roadtrippers exploring the region can save 10% on accommodation if they stay at two or more of Out of the Ordinary Outback’s properties in one trip.

Including the 10% discount, nightly rates (all per room for up to two people) start from just $94 at Copper City Motel/Hotel, $117 at The Argent Motel in Broken Hill, $122 in the billabong-side cabins at Warrawong on the Darling at Wilcannia, $140 for a subterranean room in the iconic White Cliffs Underground Motel and $175 in a deluxe king spa apartment overlooking the desert at the newly expanded Broken Hill Outback Resort.

Round-trip road journeys from capitals like Sydney, Adelaide, Canberra and Melbourne can take highway wanderers to frontier towns like the mining centres of Cobar and Broken Hill, the remote and quirky opal hamlet of White Cliffs, the historic ghost towns of Wilcannia and Silverton and the home of the famous ‘Big Bogan’ statue, Nyngan.

Less touristed and free of crowds, far western NSW is also home to majestic, ochre-red sand dunes, endless plains, Aboriginal rock art, star-filled skies and rugged ranges as well as character-filled outback pubs brimming with stories.

For further information visit www.outoftheordinaryoutback.com.au or call 1300 679 688.

SOURCE: Out of the Ordinary Outback

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