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Tourist fined after posting this one photo on social media

<p>A man has been fined after flouting the rules to get the perfect photo with a quokka at Rottnest Island. </p> <p>The tourist was visiting the popular nature reserve, off the coast of Western Australia, when he was tracked down by authorities after posting a photo of him holding the marsupial on Instagram, despite signs saying not to touch the vulnerable animals. </p> <p>"Feeding and touching quokkas is not permitted for the safety of visitors and the welfare of the animals," A Rottnest Island Authority spokesperson told <em>Perth Now</em>. </p> <p>The unnamed tourist copped a $200 fine and an infringement was issued over the weekend, but the spokesperson said he was not evicted from the island.</p> <p>The Rottnest Island website also clearly states the rules against touching the furry animals.</p> <p>"It’s important, for their safety and yours, that you don’t touch the quokkas," the website read. </p> <p>Tourists are also warned that touching the marsupials can make them sick, spread disease and cause mothers to abandon their young if they carry an unfamiliar scent. </p> <p>Samuel Cornell, a research fellow from UNSW, told <em>Yahoo News Australia </em>that these rules exist for a reason. </p> <p>"The rules are there usually to protect people's own safety, first and foremost. And then secondly, of course, we enact rules to protect the environment," Cornell said. </p> <p>"They are still wild animals, but because they're plastered all over social media and people are used to seeing pretty pictures with them, I think people then have this interpretation of them that they're just some fluffy, safe creature that you can just go up to and pick up."</p> <p>Cornell added that tourists flouting the rules is not just an issue in Rottnest Island, but "a problem across Australia," including popular tourists destinations like K'gari (formerly Fraser Island), Babinda boulders, and Wedding Cake Rock in Sydney. </p> <p>"Some people do just ignore rules or signs because they think they know better or they really want a photo in a certain place," he explained. </p> <p>"But there are a subset of people that will claim 'oh, I didn't actually see the sign or I wasn't really aware'".</p> <p><em>Images: PerthNow/ Getty</em></p>

Travel Trouble

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Is Rottnest Island home to the cutest animals on earth?

<p>Discover the stunning beachfront home of the cutest Australian wildlife the quokka. With 63 beaches, 50 kilometres of roads to and 65,000 years of history to explore you’ll love Rottnest Island’s unique natural attractions.</p> <p>It’s a beautiful island populated by perhaps Australia’s most endearing animal. So what was Dutch Captain De Vlamingh thinking in 1696 when he spent six days here and, thinking the hopping, marsupial quokkas were rats named the island Rotte Nest. He probably would have thought platypus were furry ducks.</p> <p>Today we know the island as Rottnest, the national park, historical site and quokka home some 18 km off Fremantle. So it’s even more western than West Australia.</p> <p>For generations of Perth residents “Rotto” has been the family holiday home. Now it’s been revitalised and attracts visitors from all over Australian and all around the world.</p> <p><strong>How to travel</strong></p> <p>Whether you catch the <a href="https://www.rottnestexpress.com.au/">Rottnest Express</a> from Fremantle (inevitably trimmed to “Freo”) or cruising down the Swan River from Perth, it takes less than half an hour up to 90 minutes to arrive at the dock at Thomson Bay, Rottnest’s main settlement. It’s likely that less than five minutes after disembarking you’ll meet your first quokka.</p> <p><strong>The home of the Quokka</strong></p> <p>Quokkas are small marsupials, a relative of kangaroos and wallabies. But they are small, cute and apparently totally lacking in fear – and seem to have the ability to smile.</p> <p>Walk along Sommerville Drive, the settlement’s main street, and you’ll encounter them everywhere. There are signs on the shop doors indicating that quokkas aren’t allowed inside. Now there’s a sign of admirable animal intelligence.</p> <p>Early Dutch explorers seemed to have little skill as naturalists. In 1658 Volersen thought quokkas resembled Asian civet cats but with brown hair. De Vlamingh who named the island said it was a kind of rat as big as a common cat.</p> <p>Fortunately, quokkas have taken one of their Aboriginal names but, sadly, that name is from an area of WA where they are no longer found.</p> <p><strong>Visit the island for a day</strong></p> <p>If you are a day visitor and so not staying in one of the many casual resorts around the island, then consider arranging your own transport. Cars aren’t permitted and buses are infrequent, but the island is pretty flat and well suited to bicycling. You can even include bike hire with your ferry ticket.</p> <p>A scan of a map of the island will convince all but the very keen that it’s too far to cycle around the island in a day. You can do it, but it won’t allow enough time to explore. Cape Vlamingh and the seal viewing platform at Cathedral Rocks are about 10km from the settlement.</p> <p>One option to get around this is to book a 90-minute Adventure Boat Tour and see the whole island – and its offshore whales and seals – from the water. A bonus is you’ll get to experience an exciting burn in a very fast vessel.</p> <p><strong>Explore by bike</strong></p> <p>If you are exploring by bike, then it’s a matter of which way to go first? My suggestion is to take an anti-clockwise course and don’t forget swimmers and towel. So, after leaving town then the golf course behind you’ll be at The Basin, the first of many secluded sandy coves that will prove irresistible after a hot ride.</p> <p>The ideal is to bring a picnic lunch to the island and ride till you find the perfect beach to declare your own and stop there for a swim and lunch. Alternatively, the settlement has cafes, restaurants, bars and a bakery – or a general store if you wish to make your own.</p> <p><strong>Discover fascinating history</strong></p> <p>On our ride, we cut back across the middle of the island, through the picturesque lagoons and via the central Wadjemup Lighthouse.</p> <p>There’s a lot of history on Rottnest (from salt farm to prison to military base to nature reserve) and the best way to make sense of it is to have a look through the museum then take the free daily one-hour walking History Tour around the settlement. The quaint old colonial buildings take on new meaning afterwards.</p> <p>Best of all, the guided walk took us past the Pioneer Cemetery to the Lakes Walk where we encountered a family of shelducks. But this was wild quokka territory where there was a quokka under every bush and groups sitting out in the open.</p> <p>We only had to sit for a few minutes before the quokkas came over to say hello. Soon we had quokkas sitting in our laps and exploring our backpacks for the food (that we all knew they weren’t allowed to eat). It was a wonderful moment with nature.</p> <p>As we left on the last ferry for the day, we swore that we’d come back to Rottnest to stay and experience the tranquillity that must descend when the daytrippers depart. Of the half million who visit Rottnest Island each year only a third stay overnight.</p> <p>We also swore to be more diligent in applying sunscreen - there’s not much shade when you’re out on a bike all day.</p> <p>The main reason we’ll be back, however, is that spending just one day with quokkas is not nearly enough.</p> <p><em>Written by David McGonigal. Republished with permission of <a href="https://www.wyza.com.au/articles/travel/uncover-the-natural-beauty-of-rottnest-island.aspx">Wyza.com.au</a>.</em></p>

Domestic Travel

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There's more to Rottnest Island than the adorable quokka

<p>Fresh off the Rottnest Express Ferry and eager to put distance between myself and the scores of selfie-stick wielding tourists dithering around the quaint township of Rottnest Island, I grab a hire bike from the dock and start pedalling the island's 22km coastal ring road.</p> <p>Little did I know that whiling away the day in the village's cafes, giftware shops and museum was the safe way to spend the day, but my excitement blinds me to the ominous storm clouds rolling in from the Indian Ocean.</p> <p>Two days earlier I'd landed in Perth, greeted by a keen driver from Perth Luxury Tours. "Are ya headin' to Rotto" he enthusiastically asked, as we cruised past the Swan River heading for a plush hotel in the hipster port town of Fremantle. Nattering on he promised I'd have a "pearler of a time" while regaling long summers he'd spent relaxing on the island's beaches.</p> <p>Affectionately known as Rotto by locals, the protected nature reserve sits an easy 40-minute cruise off the coast of Perth.</p> <p>The island's quaint township offers the basic necessities and nothing more. There's a small supermarket, a couple of pubs and a handful of accommodation spots, the remaining 19km is raw scrubland interrupted only by a few historical points of interest.</p> <p>For decades it has served as a go-to holiday destination for Perth residents and it's easy to see why. With scores of golden beaches, it's a cinch to get a stretch of coastline to yourself, then there's the sought-after surfing, fishing and snorkelling in the marine sanctuary zones.</p> <p>But, in recent years Rottnest has found international fame thanks to the island's adorable residents – the quokka. The small wallaby-like marsupial has been described as the "world's happiest animal" and Hollywood stars Hugh Jackman and Desperate Housewives actress Teri Hatcher have made the headlines for snapping selfies with the protected animals.</p> <p>Now, scoring a quokka selfie has become a goal for those in the social media sphere and day-trippers flock to the island to cuddle up to the cuties.</p> <p>Pedalling down the coastal road, my first impression is Perth holiday makers have the right idea. They typically spend at least three days to a week unwinding on Rotto, whereas international tourists, like myself, make daytrips and race around it in less than six hours before jumping back on the return ferry.</p> <p>A hop-on, hop-off bus whizzes past as I push up the undulating road, eroded in patches by the encroaching sand dunes. As I take in the scenery I spot my first group of quokkas huddled in the scrub. A mother and her baby happily hop up to me, eager to explore the contents of my backpack. For the health and safety of these little animals tourists are asked not to touch them, so I keep my distance.</p> <p>There's no doubt their wee faces are adorable, but I want to discover what else the island has to offer.</p> <p>Thirty minutes into the ride I pull up at Parker Point, one of the island's three snorkelling beaches. Unbelievably I have the whole beach to myself. Struck by the bright turquoise water I grab the snorkelling gear provided with the rental bike and make for the water.</p> <p>Only a few steps off the shore the ocean is teeming with life. Gently floating over the seagrass I discover thick schools of fish dancing in the reeds. I recall being told to watch out for stingrays and, as if on cue, one glides into my vision. It floats a little too close for comfort  as it checks me out.</p> <p>Back on the bike, I plan to head for the fur seal colony in Cathedral Cove on the far west point, but first I'm keen to get an elevated view of Rottnest so pedal towards Wadjemup Lighthouse, jutting out from an outcrop of jagged rocks.</p> <p>The island is known by the Aboriginal communities as Wadjemup and is a place of spiritual significance. Aboriginal artefacts have been found at a number of sites on Rottnest dating back 6500 years and some are thought to be tens of thousands of years old.</p> <p>About a kilometre out from the lighthouse, torrential rain begins to pour, soaking me in seconds. The pelting rain blurs my vision so I seek refuge under a large tree that's also sheltering a handful of damp quokkas.</p> <p>Sensing a break in the rain I hightail it back to town. Trudging into the Hotel Rottnest restaurant, still dripping from head to toe, the manager kindly offers me a towel, a sympathetic smile and a hot meal.</p> <p>With water squelching in my sneakers I board the return ferry to Fremantle, disappointed my adventure was cut short, but committed to return for a longer stay in the future.</p> <p><em>The writer travelled courtesy of Tourism WA and Air New Zealand.</em></p> <p><em>Written by Laura Baker. Republished with permission of <a href="http://www.stuff.co.nz/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Stuff.co.nz</strong></span></a>.</em></p>

International Travel

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Snap-happy quokka takes cute selfie on Rottnest Island

<p>They have been described as the "world's happiest animal" and a photo of a Quokka snapping a selfie has proven why.</p> <p>Around the size of a cat, with the tail of a rat, the nocturnal marsupials can only be found on Australia's Rottnest Island and a handful of smaller islands around the coast of Western Australia.</p> <p>Part of the kangaroo and wallaby family, it has become something of a tourist attraction and visitors flock to the island to try snap a photo with the friendly quokka.</p> <p>So when Campbell Jones was on a bike ride around the Rottnest, and spotted a cute quokka, he stopped for a picture.</p> <p>"As I walked back to my bike, the quokka chased after me," Jones, 21, told Channel Seven.</p> <p>"I put down the GoPro and it jumped at me as if to say come 'come back'."</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img width="500" height="503" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/34943/quokka2_500x503.jpg" alt="Quokka2"/></p> <p>"They (the quokkas) just walk up to you," he said.</p> <p>"They are pretty friendly little things. We just went down to take photos of them and snagged (captured) a beauty, I suppose. It has been humbling that so many people wanted the photos."</p> <p>Quokkas, famous for posing in selfies, are native to Rottnest Island where about 10,000 live a sheltered life free from predators or traffic.</p> <p>They are classified as a vulnerable species and have been almost completely wiped out on the mainland.</p> <p>Have you ever seen such a cute selfie?</p> <p><em>First appeared on <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="http://www.stuff.co.nz/" target="_blank">Stuff.co.nz</a></strong></span>. Image credit: Instagram / Campbell Jones</em></p>

International Travel

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