Of course. The great Australian Outback used to be famous.
The "outback" is still famous. It epitomises freedom for Australians, and much of Australia's livestock industry relies on the outback. Cattle and sheep stations stretch for thousands of square kilometres through the outback. The Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame in central Queensland celebrates everything that the outback represents.
sydney kangaroos, Melbourne outbacks, canberra mates
Outbacks for the US market have always been assembled in Lafayette, Indiana.
Spinifex is a sharp grass that grows in the outbacks of australia, its a spiney tough grass that you would not want to be perched upon!!
no
No.
We like to look at the wildlife and mess around on atvs and such. Well drive our tillies(trucks) out there and just screw around. Lately the outbacks been pretty muddy and it goes on for miles.
The outback is one vast area of Australia, encompassing much of Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory, and just a small corner of Victoria, depending on one's understanding of the term "outback". There can be no plural for outback, and there cannot be more than one "outback".
250K miles
Astralia's Arid climate makes up 70% of the continent.
YES.....
Outbacks for the US market have always been assembled in Lafayette, Indiana.
Yes it was a standard feature on 08 Outbacks.