DAY BY DAY
The Route South: Plains Country to Ancient Sandstone
Touchdown on the Tropic of Capricorn
Guests arrive in Longreach by QantasLink flight from Brisbane or aboard the Spirit of the Outback train. Our driver-guide meets them on arrival and transfers the group to en suite accommodation in the heart of town. The evening opens with a welcome dinner and a briefing on the journey ahead – a route that runs south from the Tropic of Capricorn through pastoral plains, heritage towns and finally into the sandstone country of Carnarvon Gorge.
The rail option is worth flagging to clients early. The Spirit of the Outback is a first-class sleeper journey of roughly 24 hours from Brisbane, and watching the country shift from coastal green to red-earth plains is an experience in itself.
Trade tip: Beyond Capricorn is a one-way touring route – Longreach in, Roma out – which makes it easy to slot into a broader Queensland programme without backtracking. Australia and Beyond Holidays can arrange pre-tour Brisbane accommodation, the rail or air sector, and onward connections at the Roma end. The 2026 savings apply across all departure arrangements.

Stockman’s Hall of Fame & Qantas Founders Museum
A full day in Longreach. The Australian Stockman’s Hall of Fame comes first, with galleries covering Indigenous land management, the drovers and the shearers who built a pastoral economy in country most people considered unworkable. The live show brings it into the present with horsemanship and muster demonstrations drawn straight from working stations.
The afternoon belongs to the Qantas Founders Museum, where Australia’s national airline began. The guided Airpark Tour takes guests onto the tarmac and through retired aircraft including a Boeing 747. Standing inside a jumbo jet hundreds of kilometres from the nearest city is genuinely strange, in a good way.
The day closes with a sunset cruise on the Thomson River followed by dinner under the stars.
Trade tip: These two attractions are reliable performers across every source market we work with. Clients from the UK, Japan and North America consistently rank the Airpark Tour among their trip highlights, and the river sunset photographs beautifully. Lead with this day when pitching the tour.

Barcaldine, the Tree of Knowledge & Tambo Teddies
The journey south begins. First stop is Barcaldine, home of the Tree of Knowledge memorial – the site linked to the 1891 shearers’ strike and the birth of Australia’s labour movement. The striking timber memorial above the original tree site is one of regional Queensland’s most photographed structures, and the Australian Workers Heritage Centre nearby fills in the story.
Then on to Tambo, the oldest town in central western Queensland. Here the pace drops. Guests visit Tambo Teddies, where local woolgrowers turned a wool-price crisis into a workshop producing handmade woollen teddy bears now sent around the world. It sounds quaint. It is quaint. It is also one of the best small-business stories in the outback, told by the people living it.
Overnight in Tambo with a relaxed country pub dinner.
Trade tip: Day 3 gives travellers something the big-ticket attractions cannot – unhurried contact with small outback communities. Chinese and Japanese clients in particular respond strongly to the Tambo Teddies workshop visit, and the bears make a popular take-home purchase.

Arrival in the Sandstone Wilderness
From Tambo the coach travels south-east through changing country – mulga scrub giving way to basalt ridges and finally the white sandstone ramparts of Carnarvon National Park. The shift is dramatic. After days of flat horizon, the land suddenly stands up.
Guests settle into wilderness lodge accommodation near the gorge entrance, then join an afternoon orientation walk along Carnarvon Creek. Cabbage palms, towering cliffs, and a fair chance of spotting platypus in the creek pools around dusk. Dinner is at the lodge, and the night sky out here needs no introduction.
Trade tip: Carnarvon Gorge remains one of Australia’s least-known world-class natural attractions among international agents. It carries none of the crowds of the better-known parks, and the lodge setting gives clients a genuine wilderness night without sacrificing comfort. This is the differentiator that sets Beyond Capricorn apart from standard outback itineraries.

Moss Garden, the Amphitheatre & Ancient Rock Art
The centrepiece of the tour. A full day of guided walking in Carnarvon Gorge, taken at a measured pace with plenty of stops. The Moss Garden comes first – a hidden grotto where water seeps through sandstone and ferns and mosses thrive in permanent shade. Then the Amphitheatre, a vast chamber carved into the cliff and reached by a short ladder climb, where the acoustics stop conversation mid-sentence.
The Art Gallery is the emotional high point. Over 2,000 engravings, ochre stencils and freehand paintings stretch along 62 metres of sandstone wall, evidence of tens of thousands of years of continuous Aboriginal culture. Our guides interpret the site with the respect and depth it deserves.
Guests return to the lodge in the late afternoon for a farewell dinner.
Trade tip: Be upfront with clients that this is the most active day of the tour – around 10 kilometres of walking on formed tracks with creek crossings on stepping stones. A shorter guided option is available for clients who prefer it. For travellers seeking authentic Aboriginal cultural sites in an uncrowded natural setting, very little in eastern Australia compares.

Roma’s Big Rig & Onward Travel
After breakfast the coach heads south to Roma, the commercial heart of the Maranoa. Time permitting, the group visits the Big Rig, which tells the story of Australia’s first natural gas discovery, and hears about the Roma Saleyards – the largest cattle selling centre in the Southern Hemisphere. On sale days the yards move thousands of head of cattle, and the scale of it lands even with travellers who have never set foot on a farm.
The tour concludes with transfers to Roma Airport for flights to Brisbane, or onward arrangements by coach or rail.
Trade tip: The Roma exit point connects smoothly to Brisbane in under an hour by air, making same-day onward connections to Sydney, Cairns or international departures realistic. Natural pairings include Great Barrier Reef touring, a Sydney stay, or a Red Centre extension via Uluru. AABH builds the complete tailor-made itinerary – flights, accommodation and transfers across the full journey – and the 2026 savings on the Beyond Capricorn component make this a strong moment to confirm bookings.

EVERYTHING COVERED

