Keep doing what you are doing !!
As usual, excellent service from Lee. The representative in Turkey was very helpful sourcing a walking stick for us!
Costa Navarino was a fabulous golf resort with excellent service from very friendly and welcoming staff . The facilities and rooms at the Westin hotel were excellent and all transfers were on time. Couldn’t fault the holiday in any way.
Excellent service from start to finish - 1st class!!
A seamless trip, much enjoyed would definitely travel with them again
Everything went very smoothly. Supertravel are very easy to deal with. I have the app on my phone, and it is very useful. Enjoyed a lively holiday.
All perfect, thanks.
Great trip to Navarino. Resort and golf courses first class. Only downside is facilities at Kalamata airport which I believe are being addressed. Martin
Excellent hotel, flights on time. Overall an excellent holiday.
Everything was arranged to the highest order. Big thanks to Mark, we all had a fab time and are looking forward to doing it again next year.
Great attention to detail. Quick replies to any questions. Helpful, efficient and friendly. Will certainly use again and have recommended to friends and family
Lovely place and a great trip
Great golf courses with drop-dead views. Service at Weston Resort best we’ve experienced. 100% recommended
Great time thank you x
Guy did a great job of helping me organise this trip to probably the best golf resort in Europe. Girona helps as well.
All 7 of us throughly enjoyed the whole holiday, hotel was excellent, both courses very enjoyable, we favoured the links as the best. Hope to be returning next year.
Guy was excellent as ever.
All went smoothly as always
First time I’ve used Supertravel. Delighted with all aspects of the service throughout. Thank you.
Excellent trip. Great hotel. Everything ran like clockwork with all our pick ups etc. Many thanks Edward Terre Will definitely use Supertravel again!
Everything went smoothly and we were looked after very well. Friendly staff who went out of their way to make our stay amazing. Beautiful hotel. Golf course at Aphrodite Hill was in pristine condition. Happy Valley tough but lovely. Wasn’t keen on the Alea course wouldn’t want to play that one again. Overall a 5 star experience.
The hotel was excellent, great rooms and very good facilities. Special mention for the company doing the transfers. On time every time and good standard of vehicles. Golf courses were superb.
Always excellent!
All fine for us. Thank you
Everything worked out seamlessly- thank you!
Great weeks golfing trip to Aphrodite Hills playing also at Secret Valley and Elea Golf Club which was superb.
As always, the plans you made for us were perfect for our needs and gave us a hassle free start and end to our holiday.
Better service than YGT at a cheaper price.
Absolutely brilliant holiday, loved it all, Guy you are a top man, thank you so much.
Another great trip - thanks
It's a sun-drenched morning at the East Perth Terminal and the Indian Pacific train gleams brightly beyond the cool shadows of the station. Two dozen stainless-steel carriages stretch along the boomerang-shaped platform.
Our coaches, dating from the late 1960s and early 1970s, were built in New South Wales by Commonwealth Engineering, which received a licence for the sleek, bullet-like design from Budd, a metal-fabricating company in Philadelphia.
I know this because John Brinkley, one of three train managers on the 1,860ft-long Indian Pacific (it travels from the Indian Ocean to the Pacific Ocean), is on hand to answer any questions. He also points guests towards their carriage for our 2,700-mile journey.
We are departing Perth on a Sunday at 11.55am, and are due to arrive in Sydney on Wednesday at 11.07am.
I'm travelling in gold class for two nights (sleeper cabins and a lounge with free drinks, plus free meals in a smart dining carriage) followed by a night in red (reclining seats and a cafe where you have to pay). There's also platinum class - comfortable cabins with double beds, a swanky dining carriage, and a free cocktail bar.
Brinkley tells me the train hit a camel on the way from Sydney to Perth a couple of days ago. 'There was damage to the loco - we had to repair an air pipe. We blow animal whistles and the horn, but it still happens. Kangaroos keep out of the way generally. Kangaroos are pretty smart.'
We roll out of Perth and into the parched countryside with gum trees, shrubs and orange-tinged soil. After dumping my bag in my cabin, I go to the gold-class lounge to meet my fellow travellers. Many are sitting in burgundy leather armchairs and banquettes drinking Crown lager and glasses of Australian wine, while conversations range from Chinese investment in Hunter Valley coal mines to the quality of the train's gin (deemed top-notch).
It's a jolly train. Meals are substantial: three courses, served in booths separated by frosted-glass partitions.
We stop at Kalgoorlie (population: 31,000) at 10.45pm. Coaches take us past darkened sights including a vast working mine; gold was discovered here in 1893. The town has a frontier feel. A guide points out a Woolworths that has the biggest takings in Australia (gold miners have plenty of cash to spend).
I sleep well, to the rhythm of the tracks, and wake to see copper-gold light illuminating wispy clouds above gum trees and dried-out river beds.By mid-morning, the Indian Pacific draws to a halt at Cook (population: four) and I spot a sign saying: 'If you're crook, come to Cook, Queen City of the Nullarbor.' Crook, of course, is slang for 'ill' in Australia, while the Nullarbor Plain is a region that boasts a wild and rugged landscape. A 297-mile section of track running through it is the world's longest straight stretch. Cook is an outpost of rundown buildings. However, it's a good place to stretch our legs.
Early next morning we pull into Adelaide, and passengers join coach tours of the South Australian city. We are taken to Mount Lofty, though it's shrouded in cloud. We see the Adelaide Oval, where there's a statue of cricket legend Sir Don Bradman.
Back at Adelaide Parklands Terminal I buy a battery-powered beer-bottle cooler that makes train sounds when lifted.
Now I have to switch to red class, towards the front of the train. It comprises 48 seats that look as though they belong in a plane's business-class, but filled with backpackers and retirees.
Our duty manager recommends the breakfasts that he personally cooks. 'I've had phone calls from Gordon Ramsay and Jamie Oliver saying, "I've heard about your breakfasts". I reply, "No, I can't come to work for you. I want the twenty bucks an hour Great Southern Rail is paying me".' Not far out of Adelaide, I glimpse my first and only kangaroos, far in the distance. I also spot an eagle high above.
That evening we reach Broken Hill, a lead and zinc mining town, and I make my way to the Palace Hotel. The venue featured in the 1994 film The Adventures Of Priscilla, Queen Of The Desert, about the unlikely subject of drag queens in the Outback.
I discover a reception area with bright murals, stuffed birds and cabinets displaying leopard-print high heels. On the wall is an advert for the Broken Heel Festival. Its motto? 'Life in the Outback is never a drag.' Back on the train, we clatter through the night and wake to see cows munching grass in the foothills of the Blue Mountains. I eat our carriage manager's Gordon Ramsay-quality breakfast and sit back as we snake into Sydney's Grand Central station. We're a mere 13 minutes late - not bad when you've just covered 2,700 miles.
First published in the Mail on Sunday - September 2016
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