How do Australian cities, Regional Australia, Rural Australia, and the Outback differ from each other?
How much meth are you looking to smoke?
>>2865080Why don't you visit Aus and tell us, anon? Strange how we never hear about adventurers doing a bikepacking tour of Australia. Maybe it is too much of a nanny state to rent a motorbike and ride the coastal highway, crash out wherever you end up at sunset.Or maybe Australia simply isn't a place of adventure. Its cities were planned and then filled in later by a slew of random migrants. They didn't grow naturally as a native population expanded and built up their surroundings. Natural cities are much more worthwhile and interesting to explore, because they are full of unique quirks that attest to their long and storied past. In a modern planned city, all you have to spice up the identical streets are fucking weird murals, weird sculptures and businesses which market themselves as quirky and hip (while charging sky-high prices for the "vibe", of course). As an American, such downtowns get very tiring very quickly, especially if you don't have huge wads of money to blow. And there's hardly ever anybody on the streets in these modern planned cities either. That's what makes them feel so soulless. All life happens behind closed doors. When people do begin congregating in the street in a planned city, it starts feeling like a ghetto or a homeless camp. Awful humans in a well-planned environment, versus good humans in an awful environment. Which do you prefer?