Occupying an area roughly three times the size of England, but with fewer than 100,000 residents, the Kimberley region, in the far northwest of Australia, is “almost boundlessly remote”. A single highway, the Gibb River Road, runs through its heart, and it makes for an “extraordinary” drive, says Matthew Parris in The Times – a 400-mile odyssey through “an epic landscape of red rock and burning sun, scarred by gorges laced with waterfalls and limpid pools”. Popular with “what Aussies call grey nomads” – retirees who head north to escape the southern winter – it is quite safe, and there are plenty of pleasant lodges and campsites along the way. But in this vast wilderness, solitude is everywhere for the taking, as are fabulous, ever-changing views.
Tropical wet-season rains can…