
Before moving to her new home in northern NSW with her fellow tour leader husband Duncan, Barbara lived and worked in the Blue Mountains for numerous years and has a solid background in travel, tourism and hospitality. Her career began…

Duncan grew up in South Australia, and in 1977 made the leap from studying Road Design to Theatre at the University of Queensland. He first met Scott McGregor, the founder of Railway Adventures, in 1982 when they co-starred in a…
This is a very special authentic outback journey combining rail travel, community spirit and the artistry of Opera Queensland’s Festival of Outback Opera. You’ll have the privilege of attending numerous signature events of the Festival, including the Dark Sky Serenade at the Age of Dinosaurs in Winton, and the Opera Queensland Long Lunch at the Qantas Founders Museum in Longreach. Other special treats are an overnight journey in First Class cabins on the iconic Spirit of the Outback train from Brisbane, a sunset cruise on the Thompson River, a camp-oven themed dinner under the stars, and a day of rail cruising across the Mitchell Grass plains to have lunch in Queensland’s oldest pub.
Welcome to Brisbane! Make your way to our hotel and check in. Check in is available from 2.00pm.
Our tour starts tonight at 6.00pm with drinks in the hotel bar to meet your tour leader and fellow travellers before enjoying a welcome dinner at the historic Transcontinental Hotel, including drinks.
Please reach out to us on 1300 800 977 if you’d like to arrive in Brisbane earlier and would like pre-tour accommodation booked for you.
This morning is yours to relax over a lazy breakfast before checking out or get out and about exploring Brisbane’s CBD at your own pace – the hotel will happily store your luggage. The city’s beautiful South Bank cultural precinct is just a 10-minute scenic stroll across the Neville Bonner Bridge, and well worth visiting. We’ll regroup in the hotel lobby in the early afternoon and transfer to Roma Street Station to settle into our First Class cabins on the iconic Spirit of the Outback train for a classic rail journey linking Brisbane with Queensland’s heartland.
Travelling 1,325 kilometres, this legendary train reveals the shifting landscapes from the coast’s lush greenery to the vast Mitchell Grass Downs and soft outback hues of western Queensland.
Enjoy a drink in the Shearers Rest Lounge with your fellow travellers, savour a locally inspired dinner in the Tucker Box Restaurant, and retire to your comfortable sleeper cabin as the countryside rolls by.
Setting the scene for your Festival of Outback Opera adventure, you’ll be treated to impromptu preview performances by onboard Opera Queensland artists.
The train leaves at 2.40pm so please arrange your flights to enable you to be at Roma Street Station to meet your Tour Leader and fellow travellers at 2.15pm
Overnight: Spirit of the Outback Sleeper Train (D)
After enjoying breakfast and lunch on the train as you watch the countryside roll by, we’ll arrive in Barcaldine, birthplace of the Australian Labor Party and home to the Tree of Knowledge, where the first shearers’ strike helped shape the nation’s history.
Here, you’ll meet your experienced Outback Aussie Tours Driver and Host, and board our private coach for the one-hour drive to Blackall, a thriving outback township that quite literally grew up on the sheep’s back. It was here in 1892 that legendary blade shearer Jack Howe made history at Alice Downs, shearing 321 sheep in seven hours and forty minutes — a record that still stands in spirit today.
After checking in to your accommodation, enjoy a relaxed dinner in the motel restaurant and settle into the warm rhythm of outback life.
Overnight: Oasis Motor Inn or Coolibah Motel, Blackall (B, L, D)
This morning after breakfast, we’ll tour the historic Blackall Woolscour, Australia’s last remaining steam-powered wool-washing plant. It’s an experience that immerses visitors in the stories, sights and scents of a pivotal era in the nation’s wool trade.
After enjoying lunch at the Bushman’s Artisans Gallery, housed in the former Bushman’s Hotel, now a vibrant showcase of local creativity, art and craftsmanship, you’ll have free time to explore the township
Barcaldine’s history is deeply tied to Australia’s pastoral and labor heritage. The town became a focal point during the 1891 Great Shearers’ Strike, one of Australia’s largest industrial actions, where thousands of workers protested exploitative conditions in the wool industry. Strikers camped under a ghost gum tree outside the railway station – now immortalized as the Tree of Knowledge – flying the Eureka Flag. This event is credited with sparking the Australian labor movement and leading to the formation of the Australian Labor Party. On September 9, 1892, the Manifesto of the Queensland Labour Party was read aloud beneath the tree, a document now inscribed on UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register.
Early this evening we’ll gather for an Opera Queensland recital, before enjoying dinner at The Lodge on Hawthorn, a heritage-listed building steeped in history that once operated as the Blackall Masonic Temple.
Overnight: Oasis Motor Inn or Coolibah Motel, Blackall (B, L, D)
This morning after breakfast and check out, we’ll board our coach and travel through classic Outer Barcoo country, discovering landscapes that inspired some of Australia’s most celebrated poets, including Banjo Paterson. As you approach Isisford, its streetscape feels like a step back in time to the late 1800s. Here, we’ll visit the Barcoo Interpretive Centre for a chronological journey through the evolution of nature, spanning from 100 million years ago to the present day. The museum’s star exhibit is a life-sized model of the Isisfordia duncani Replica, an ancient crocodilian ancestor, discovered on the outskirts of Isisford in the 1990s. Dating back about 98 million years, Isisfordia is considered the evolutionary forebear of all modern crocodiles and alligators worldwide.
After pausing for some lunch, we’ll continue to Longreach and check in to our accommodation for the next five nights – Saltbush Retreat, a boutique outback lodging experience offering rustic yet elegant accommodation that captures the unique textures and tones of the Australian outback, blending natural beauty with modern comforts.
After taking some time to settle in and freshen up, guests of Railway Adventures will embark on an exclusive evening experience, transferring to the Thomson River to board the Longreach Explorer for the award-winning Drover’s Sunset Cruise followed by Smithy’s Outback Dinner & Show for camp-oven inspired dining and live entertainment under the stars.
Overnight: Saltbush Retreat, Longreach (B, L, D)
This morning after breakfast, Railway Adventures guests will enjoy an exclusive day on board the historic 2000-class rail motor for a scenic rail adventure across the Mitchell Grass plains. You’ll travel through coolibah-lined creeks and open floodplains before stopping at the Darr River, a classic example of an arid-zone Australian river – bone-dry for years, then suddenly transforming into a bird-filled inland sea after tropical rain – for a traditional smoko and billy tea beside the waterhole. You’ll have the opportunity to learn about the area’s rich pastoral heritage, native flora, and bush medicine.
Back on the train, we’ll continue on to Ilfracombe, founded in 1891 as a Cobb & Co coach stop and railhead when the railway reached there from Rockhampton. This one-pub town is often described as a “living museum of the machinery age” because of its quirky roadside attraction – the Ilfracombe Machinery and Heritage Museum, also known as the “Mile of Machinery” – a 1 kilometre stretch along the highway where dozens of vintage tractors, trucks, wagons, steam engines, road graders, and other agricultural machinery from the 1920s to 1960s are lined up on both sides of the road.
We’ll enjoy a hearty pub lunch at the historic Wellshot Hotel — built in 1891 and the oldest licensed pub in western Queensland, before having some time to explore this quirky town.
This evening, we’ll enjoy a relaxed Outback BBQ Dinner at The Tin Shed, located on the grounds of Mitchell Grass Retreat, beginning with pre-dinner drinks and canapés on the Sunset Viewing Deck, while watching the Texas Longhorn Steers grazing in the nearby paddock.
Overnight: Saltbush Retreat, Longreach (B, L, D)
This morning after an early breakfast, we’ll travel west along the Matilda Highway to historic Winton – settled in 1873, Winton is famously known as the “birthplace of Waltzing Matilda,” – while staying at Dagworth Station, Banjo Paterson was inspired by a shearer’s death at nearby Combo Waterhole. What is widely recognised as Australia’s unofficial national anthem, it was first performed at the North Gregory Hotel in Winton on April 6, 1895. The town is also a hotspot for dinosaur enthusiasts and part of Queensland’s “Dinosaur Trail.” Key sites include the Australian Age of Dinosaurs and the Dinosaur Stampede at Lark Quarry Conservation Park.
Upon arrival we’ll visit the Waltzing Matilda Centre, the only museum in the world dedicated to a song, and take time to browse the local boulder opal shops. After lunch, we’ll head out to the Australian Age of Dinosaurs, perched high on a mesa with panoramic views across the surrounding jump-up country.
Home to the largest collection of Australian dinosaur fossils in the world, the centre offers a fascinating insight into prehistoric life. Here, you’ll join a guided tour of the laboratory and collection room with passionate local guides who reveal the story of the giants that once roamed this region.
As the sun sets, we’ll settle into the Opera in the Outback festival’s signature event – Dark Sky Serenade. This spectacular open-air performance unfolds beneath a canopy of stars, blending world-class opera with the timeless beauty of the outback landscape,in a place that was once the domain of dinosaurs. You’ll have a ‘nibbles pack’ for the performance and then enjoy a light supper on the mesa afterwards.
For those that are interested, you’ll have the option to join a guided night walk through Dinosaur Canyon, featuring life-sized dinosaur sculptures and the Valley of the Cycads, before travelling back to Longreach.
Overnight: Saltbush Retreat, Longreach (B, L, D)
It’s a leisurely start today – enjoy a relaxed breakfast, soak in an outdoor bath, or take a stroll through town – perhaps do all three!
Later in the morning, we’ll head to the world-class Qantas Founders Museum to participate in the exclusive “Opera Long Lunch”, another signature event of this wonderful festival, for a celebration of regional cuisine and song. You’ll dine among historic aircraft and aviation exhibits as Opera Queensland artists perform a repertoire of uplifting arias and ensembles that fill the soaring hangar space with music.
After lunch, we’ll join in the festivities of the annual Longreach Show, a favourite event in Central western Queensland for more than 130 years. This lively community celebration combines rural heritage and outback hospitality, featuring livestock judging, equestrian events, art and craft displays, and local produce stalls. Festival pop-up performances add an operatic flair to the show atmosphere, offering another opportunity to connect with the people and spirit of outback Queensland.
Dinner is at leisure at the Showgrounds.
Overnight: Saltbush Retreat, Longreach (B,L)
This morning after breakfast, we’ll visit the Australian Stockman’s Hall of Fame and explore its inspiring galleries that celebrate the stories, skills and spirit of the outback. Opened by Queen Elizabeth II, this unique museum celebrates the unsung heroes of rural and outback Australia, particularly the contributions of the men and women who opened up and developed Australia’s vast inland—explorers, stockmen, drovers, pastoralists, miners, Indigenous Australians, and pioneering families.
After perusing the wonderful exhibits, you’ll take your seat at the Stockman’s Live Show for an engaging performance of horsemanship and stock handling, and get a sense of the action of a live muster. Following lunch at one of Longreach’s favourite local hotels, we’ll return to our accommodation to relax and prepare for the evening ahead.
Later in the afternoon, we’ll travel just ten minutes beyond town to Camden Park Station, an 18,000-acre working cattle property that has hosted everyone from Australia’s pioneering stockmen to Queen Elizabeth II. Tonight, its wide horizons and glowing skies set the scene for “Singing in the Night”, complete with canapes and supper. As the plains are bathed in soft twilight, Opera Queensland’s finest voices join with University of Queensland musicians and orchestra for a stirring performance.
Overnight: Saltbush Retreat, Longreach (B, L, D)
There’s no rush this morning to have breakfast and checkout before returning to the Stockman’s Hall of Fame to join “Sing, Sing, Sing” at The Drover’s Place Cottage, a sandstone cottage hand-built in the early 1980s by the legendary Australian bushman and saddler R.M. Williams, who personally cut the sandstone blocks from a local quarry at the age of 70.
Led by Opera Queensland artists, this uplifting event invites singers of all experience levels to come together for a morning of music, laughter and connection – a fitting finale to your Festival of Outback Opera journey.
After lunch together, we’ll transfer back to the Qantas Founders Museum to more fully explore the stories and artefacts that trace the early years of Australia’s national airline. Wander through the main exhibition gallery and the original 1922 hangar, where historic aircraft, photographs and memorabilia bring the pioneering days of flight to life. Join a guided Airpark Tour for the chance to step aboard the iconic Boeing 707 and 747, discovering how a small outback venture evolved into one of the world’s most respected airlines.
From here, we’ll transfer to Longreach Airport for your QantasLink flight back to Brisbane, due to arrive at 6.15pm, taking with you lasting memories of song, story and outback hospitality.
End of Tour (B,L)
1 night accommodation in a private cabin on Spirit of the Outback train
2 nights motel accommodation
5 nights accommodation in boutique outback lodging
Breakfast daily, 8 lunches, 7 dinners
All transport fares and costs provided for in the itinerary
All meals, drinks excursions provided for in the itinerary
2 Full-time Railway Adventures Tour Leaders
Knowledgeable guides
Travel to tour departure point and from tour end point
Travel insurance (Mandatory for international travel)
Meals and drinks not provided for in the itinerary
Things of a personal nature such as phone calls, laundry, room service, etc
The best train trips possible, private luxury coach for off-train travel, guided walking where suitable, and other appropriate and appealing options to make exploration easy
Hand-picked hotels and resorts based on location, customer feedback, value and atmosphere. Please Note: Hotels of a similar standard may be substituted.
Hear from some of our adventurers that have already ridden the rails with us.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur. Tincidunt convallis magna eu ac eu cursus. In duis fusce risus nec eget habitant massa pharetra. Eros a gravida faucibus lorem.

Reserve your place on this exciting exploration of Opera in the Outback by Rail.

Train traveller, well known TV personality and travel company owner, Scott McGregor, has travelled on some of the world’s most inspiring railway tours and led the most exclusive group adventures to numerous exotic destinations over the years.
“Rustic, character-filled, zig-zagging railways of Burma, opulent hotels on wheels in India South Africa and Sri Lanka, steam-hauled heritage trains in some of the most staggeringly scenic parts of the world, dinky little rail-cars in outback Queensland, bullet trains in Japan, cliff-hugging lines in Switzerland and Norway—if it travels on a rail track, I’m there!”, exclaims self-confessed train travel tragic, Scott McGregor. “In my mind, travelling by rail is still the most wonderful way to immerse yourself in the country you’re visiting. It’s romantic, relaxing and about as much fun as you can have!”.
Aa a child of the last days of steam trains in the busy junction town of Orange, NSW; trains heading in all directions offering temptations and dreams of faraway places, left an indelible impression on a young, inquisitive boy and Scott has been riding the rails in one form or another ever since. While Scott’s acting career of 30 years kept him busy starring in numerous TV shows and stage plays and then as an on-air presenter on programs such as Better Homes and Gardens, Room for Improvement and various pay-TV programs, his passion for railway tours was ever-present. “Presenting a series of Railway Adventure travel programs for Channel 7 was a career highlight”, he says with as much enthusiasm now as he had then.
In 2012 Scott decided to combine three of his passions; travel, trains and presenting, and launched Railway Adventures. Not only does he get to expand his own horizons and indulge his love of train travel, he gets to use his extensive hosting experience and love of people to lead other like-minded travellers on escorted train tours around the world. Since then, Railway Adventures has mounted more than 50 tours from Sweden to Sri Lanka, Tasmania to Transylvania, Britain to Burma and Venice to Vietnam, thrilling over 1,000 travellers. New tours are launched regularly, inspired by new trains, new routes and the growing interest in taking a train to some of the world’s most fascinating places. But you don’t have to be a train ‘nut’ to enjoy a Railway Adventures tour – there’s something for everyone!
Just one example of how Scott finds inspiration for a tour can be found in Outback Queensland. “There you find some of Australia’s most eccentric and appealing trains and together with a mail-plane flight over the Gulf and some interesting local coach and boat trips you have the essence of a quintessential Aussie outback adventure. The sleeper train, The Spirit of the Outback, the Savannahlander and the Gulflander (which has been running on the same timetable for more than 125 years!) are all iconic trains that traverse various parts of the wild Outback, Savannah and tropical rainforest landscapes of the vast state of Queensland. Along with some other special treats not available to the ordinary traveller, Railway Adventures passengers get to do it all!.
One of his favourite journey’s is by private train in Sri Lanka. For 2 weeks every year Scott charters the Viceroy Special heritage train to tour the island on a gentle rail cruise with a lucky group of travellers. Staying in luxury resorts and hotels along the way, his special train travels to almost every corner of the scenic island. “Having a private train at your disposal for an adventure around this magic island is a rare treat and a great way to immerse yourself in the scenery and culture of the country.”, he enthuses. “Our Vietnam tour makes use of private carriages attached to regular trains to explore that great country in comfort and in South Africa we use a variety of trains including the luxurious Rovos Rail and the Royal Livingstone steam train to move from one incredible adventure to another”.
Apart from the obvious joy of seeing a country by train, travelling in a small group of like-minded travellers with a dedicated, experienced tour leader and knowledgeable, English-speaking local guides is what really sets Railway Adventures apart. “The camaraderie that comes from both shared purpose and shared experiences on tour is an important aspect of the journey” Scott adds. “We’ve seen many people become life-long friends from the time they shared together along the line. The best feeling in the world is when I welcome these same people on repeat journeys”.
Along with popular destinations like Switzerland, Scandinavia, Outback Queensland and Sri Lanka, a new breed of more unusual destinations has gained great interest. Java, Cuba, Southern Africa, India and the New England region of NSW are just some of the newer adventures on offer. As for Scott’s next escape, it’s most likely some quality time at Ruwenzori Retreat, his own personal train on the Great Dividing Range near Mudgee, Central NSW. Built from a collection of vintage railway carriages it’s now a boutique tourist accommodation, comprising exclusive Orient Express style comfort for up to 13 guests. “When the travels are done, coming back to my own train in the beautiful Mudgee mountains is the most restorative and magical time for this committed rail romantic”, Scott says.