Bruce Elder, an accomplished travel journalist and author, served as a critical source of local knowledge for the show’s creators. Having travelled extensively around Australia and hiked many of its trails, Elder brought a wealth of information to help shape the show. But his knowledge was most beneficial for Episode 4, which sees Julia hike the Kiama Coast Walk.
“I had a lot of input into the Kiama episode because I have lived here for 40 years and really do know a lot about the local area.”
Unsurprisingly, the Kiama Coast Walk is Bruce’s personal favourite of the featured walks. “I have done it many, many times and it combines some of the most beautiful coastal scenery with interesting history and geology,” he said.
Interestingly, Elder believes the pandemic has ignited an intense craving among Australians to get out and travel. “Just a sense of relief as a consequence of being denied the right to travel,” he says. It sounds like this phenomenon is in full effect on his home turf – “Kiama is now crazy every weekend… a crazy tourist town. And it wasn’t before the pandemic.”
When asked about selecting the ten epic walks featured on Great Australian Walks, the show’s producer Dan Goldberg revealed that the team liaised with Bruce Elder because he “knows just about every walk on this continent”. Goldberg also noted that, since the show went into production while Covid travel restrictions were still in force, the potential walks were restricted to locations within New South Wales, the ACT, Victoria and Tasmania.