Julie Miller is an award-winning travel writer and author who scrapes a living doing the things she loves best – travelling, writing, watching wildlife and riding horses. She has been widely published in both Australian and international publications and is the author of six non-fiction books. Much of her inspiration come from her rural retreat near the Blue Mountains, a garden filled with animals and the colours of the seasons.

Walk to Wellness

Walk to Wellness

Give your health a kick start on one of these accessible bushwalks in the Blue Mountains. By Julie Miller

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The Tonic You Need

The Tonic You Need

“Rising mists everywhere, giving place to glorious sunlight, with peeps of blue sky above…: an atmosphere light, cold, and exhilarating in the extreme; such is the scene that greets us as we fling up our window at The Carrington, one of the most comfortable and convenient hotels in all Australia.” (Sydney Mail & NSW Advertiser February 1891)

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The Art of High Tea

The Art of High Tea

At Archer & Hobb, high tea is elevated to a fine dining experience. By Julie Miller. 

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Find your inner calm at Kurrara Historic Guest House

Find your inner calm at Kurrara Historic Guest House

Built as a health retreat in 1901, Kurrara Historic Guest house is once again a place to find inner peace and wellbeing.

In the late 1890s, the Blue Mountains became a popular destination for those wishing to escape the industrialised smoke and noise of Sydney.

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Carrington Hotel: Grand Old Lady of Katoomba Comes of Age

Carrington Hotel: Grand Old Lady of Katoomba Comes of Age

Lording over the main street of Katoomba, its imposing curved driveway announcing its grand and ornate exterior, is one of the Blue Mountains’ oldest hotels – The Carrington. Opened in 1882 and originally called The Great Western, the hotel heralded a new era of tourism for Katoomba, which had until then been a “nondescript little mining town” originally bearing the comical name of The Crushers.

The timeless elegance of the past meets the best of modern hospitality at Katoomba’s Carrington Hotel.

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Blue Mountains Botanic Garden

Blue Mountains Botanic Garden

Continuing a botanical legacy: Blue Mountains Botanic Garden.

Nine years before Blaxland, Wentworth and Lawson made their historic trek across the Blue Mountains in 1813, a naturalist named George Caley – curator of the colony’s first botanic gardens at Parramatta – forged a route along the northern rim of the Grose Valley, the first European to penetrate the mountains west of Sydney.

His mission was to collect botanical specimens; and on November 10, 1804, Caley reached a place of great beauty, a summit cloaked in magnificent tree ferns known to the Darug people as Tomah. Several days later, however, Caley’s party aborted their mission at nearby Mount Banks, thwarted by the rugged, seemingly impenetrable terrain.

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