Home and Away star Lynne McGranger reveals her travel highlights
The Home and Away star has clocked up visits to more than 20 countries, but loves returning to Tasmania.
I got my first passport when….
I was 20 and I went with my mum, dad and sister to the UK. This would have been the early '70s. Dad was going there for work and we stayed in Pimlico in a lovely maisonette. The problem was that the early '70s were when the IRA had started to ramp up its bombings in London. Despite all the caution and fear, I still fell in love with London and I'm so grateful to be able to return regularly.
I've been to more than 20 countries...
I have travelled a great deal over the years. England, Scotland, Wales, southern Ireland, France, Italy, Spain, Bulgaria, Greece to name a few. Travel is a part of my DNA. I love experiencing new cultures.
My most memorable travel experience is...
I would say going to Israel during the First Intifada in 1987. We experienced jets going overhead, we saw tanks that had been blown up in the 1967 war that had been left as a memorial, we met Jewish people, Palestinian people and we met Christians and we fell in love with all of the people. It was a scary, savage and an amazing experience. I learned a great deal from that trip and the experience has stayed with me all these years later.
Lynne McGranger with friend Sharon Dong on the Three Capes Walk in Tasmania.
My favourite place in Australia is...
Tasmania. I love the people, the land, the history – even though some of that history is very bleak as we know. I love the coastline, the food and the wine. I've recently returned from walking the Three Capes Track. It was a slightly more arduous walk than I had anticipated on some days, but I loved every moment of it. I travelled with a girlfriend and made some wonderful new friends. And the scenery is stunning.
The place I'd love to visit in Australia is….
The Red Centre. I've not been to Alice Springs or Uluru and I'm fascinated to see it. As a cast member of touring musical comedy The Grandparents Club, I'm very fortunate to experience a lot of Australia. I'm really hoping the tour includes the NT next year.
The place I have visited most often…
In Australia that is Tassie. I just keep being drawn back to it. Overseas, I have visited York in the north of England many times to catch up with my best friend, Maureen, and her husband, Phil, and I'll be returning there again very soon.
Lynne McGranger and friends visiting Castle Howard in Yorkshire.
My holidays are mostly devoted to…
We walk a lot. We love talking with locals and kind of just absorbing the vibe of where we are. We love our food and our wine and the locals always have the best advice on the great restaurants and bars.
The place that didn't live up to expectations…
I didn't like Athens. My only trip there was before Athens held the Olympics so we're talking 1989 and I just didn't like the vibe of it at all. Perhaps we stayed in the wrong end of town, but my experience found Athens to be very dirty and seedy. I'm sure it's very different now.
The most interesting person I've met on a plane is…
We met the wonderful songwriter Randy Newman at Athens airport (so Athens wasn't completely disappointing) and I've seen Paul Keating in the lounge at Sydney airport, but I can't think of anyone else I've met on a plane. I love sliding into my plane seat, putting on my earphones and getting immersed in great movies, so if someone famous was right near me, I would miss them in all likelihood.
The Grand Chancellor hotel in Hobart at Constitution Wharf.
The best hotel I've ever stayed in…
I really love the Grand Chancellor in Hobart at Constitution Wharf. I love the way it operates, all of the staff are so welcoming and it has such a homey feel to it. I also love the Sofitel in Collins Street, Melbourne.
The travel tips I'd like to share are…
My dad taught me a great deal about valuing travel. He fought in World War II and he always taught us to get out among things and to not let fear hold us back. You're there to experience and you don't want to go home with regrets.
Lynne McGranger tours nationally with The Grandparents Club 2 from July to October. For all show details head to thegrandparentsclub.com
Originally published as Home and Away star Lynne McGranger reveals her travel highlights

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Age
5 hours ago
- The Age
Spain's former capital is worth more than a day trip
Walk five minutes south of the monastery, past one former synagogue – Santa Maria La Blanca, reputed to be Europe's oldest – and you arrive at another. The magnificent carved wooden ceilings and plasterwork walls of El Transito blend Mozarabic decorative influences. Constructed in 1355, El Transito houses the Sephardic Museum, which accounts for Toledo's long Jewish history. You'll find good information sheets in English and the museum has some especially beautiful ceramics. Pause afterwards in the synagogue's small memorial garden. See Take in the art at Hospital de Tavera Don't like monuments and art? Better skip Toledo, which has them in spades. This Renaissance palace, built by a cardinal for the needy, is a whopper. The architectural highlight is the symmetrical double courtyards, while a wealth of paintings includes masterpieces by El Greco, Tintoretto and Zurbaran. Cardinal Tavera's marble tomb is a sculptural work of art too, with no sign of humility other than a little memento mori skull tucked under his pillow. See Admire El Greco paintings Toledo is associated with El Greco, the 16th-century painter whose works seem astonishingly modern. You can see quite a few of his paintings in Toledo, and all are odd and electrifying. The church of Santo Domingo Monastery where the painter is buried has top examples including the altarpiece Assumption of the Virgin showing Mary springing from her tomb like a jack-in-the-box. El Greco Museum (in a house where El Greco never lived, despite claims) has several superb later works. See Fill up at Confiteria Santo Tome If El Greco's elongated, hollow-cheeked saints make you peckish, take a break from gloomy painted art and indulge in happy edible art instead. Toledo nuns are said to have invented marzipan – which is disputed – but Toledo has certainly produced it for centuries. Santo Tome, in business since 1856, is Spain's best-known marzipan maker. You can devour biscuits, pastries, cakes, sweets and marzipan fruit filled with lip-licking goo. Like El Greco's saints, you'll soon be in heaven. See Take a hike to Mirador del Valle Loading In this old town of closed-in alleys, you'll want to get beyond the walls to admire Toledo's fabulous setting above the Tagus River, dominated by the whopping Alcazar, or fortress. This viewpoint is a 40-minute walk from Puente Nuevo bridge just below the fortress, but outlooks are fabulous all the way. Sunset and twilight are the most atmospheric. The lazy option is a taxi to nearby Parador de Toledo for a cocktail on the terrace. See

Sydney Morning Herald
5 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Spain's former capital is worth more than a day trip
Walk five minutes south of the monastery, past one former synagogue – Santa Maria La Blanca, reputed to be Europe's oldest – and you arrive at another. The magnificent carved wooden ceilings and plasterwork walls of El Transito blend Mozarabic decorative influences. Constructed in 1355, El Transito houses the Sephardic Museum, which accounts for Toledo's long Jewish history. You'll find good information sheets in English and the museum has some especially beautiful ceramics. Pause afterwards in the synagogue's small memorial garden. See Take in the art at Hospital de Tavera Don't like monuments and art? Better skip Toledo, which has them in spades. This Renaissance palace, built by a cardinal for the needy, is a whopper. The architectural highlight is the symmetrical double courtyards, while a wealth of paintings includes masterpieces by El Greco, Tintoretto and Zurbaran. Cardinal Tavera's marble tomb is a sculptural work of art too, with no sign of humility other than a little memento mori skull tucked under his pillow. See Admire El Greco paintings Toledo is associated with El Greco, the 16th-century painter whose works seem astonishingly modern. You can see quite a few of his paintings in Toledo, and all are odd and electrifying. The church of Santo Domingo Monastery where the painter is buried has top examples including the altarpiece Assumption of the Virgin showing Mary springing from her tomb like a jack-in-the-box. El Greco Museum (in a house where El Greco never lived, despite claims) has several superb later works. See Fill up at Confiteria Santo Tome If El Greco's elongated, hollow-cheeked saints make you peckish, take a break from gloomy painted art and indulge in happy edible art instead. Toledo nuns are said to have invented marzipan – which is disputed – but Toledo has certainly produced it for centuries. Santo Tome, in business since 1856, is Spain's best-known marzipan maker. You can devour biscuits, pastries, cakes, sweets and marzipan fruit filled with lip-licking goo. Like El Greco's saints, you'll soon be in heaven. See Take a hike to Mirador del Valle Loading In this old town of closed-in alleys, you'll want to get beyond the walls to admire Toledo's fabulous setting above the Tagus River, dominated by the whopping Alcazar, or fortress. This viewpoint is a 40-minute walk from Puente Nuevo bridge just below the fortress, but outlooks are fabulous all the way. Sunset and twilight are the most atmospheric. The lazy option is a taxi to nearby Parador de Toledo for a cocktail on the terrace. See

Herald Sun
11 hours ago
- Herald Sun
Tourism Australia unveils $130m campaign with a focus on China
Don't miss out on the headlines from Breaking News. Followed categories will be added to My News. Tourism Australia is launching a $130m campaign to lure in more cash-splashing holiday-makers from abroad, with China's exploding middle class top of mind. Ads unveiled by Tourism Australia on Monday offered a glimpse of how the government agency planned to target would-be vacationers from the US, UK, China, India and Japan. In the pitch to Americans, Robert Irwin gives an American traveller the ride of his life in a Toyota LandCruiser through steep sand dunes. Mr Irwin also features in a Chinese-language ad alongside Yu Shi – a young A-list actor leading an explosive career since his 2023 breakout role in a major Chinese epic fantasy franchise. Anthony Albanese gave a first look at the campaign while on his lengthy state visit to China last month. Making up some 860,000 visits, visitors from the country splashed a whopping $9.2bn in the 12 months to March, according to official figures. Both the number of visits and the amount spent were up on March 2024 figures by 26 per cent and 28 per cent respectively. Still reeling from the Covid-19 pandemic and blindsided by devastating natural disasters in recent years, Australia's tourism industry welcomes the trend. While in China, the Prime Minister made no secret that he was hoping to reframe Australia's relationship with Beijing in friendlier terms and shed the spectre of an increasingly militaristic regional rivalry. Though, despite his efforts to escape defence and security concerns, little has changed since his return, with the Trump administration driving uncertainty around AUKUS. The Albanese government has been keen to highlight that other countries are being targeted with the Come and Say G'day campaign. Celebrity chef Nigella Lawson featured in the UK ad, while wellness influencer Sara Tendulkar and comedian Abareru-kun appealed to audiences in India and Japan. All ads featured a chipper Ruby the Roo – an animated kangaroo eagerly urging travellers to 'come and say g'day'. 'The previous campaign struck a chord with visitors, with Ruby the Roo bounding into the imagination of countless guests, encouraging them to book a holiday Down Under,' Trade and Tourism Minister Don Farrell said. 'I know this iteration, featuring popular talent like Robert Irwin, will be a smash. 'Tourism is the lifeblood of so many communities right around the country and creates hundreds of thousands of jobs. 'Come and Say G'day is bringing more visitors to our shores, creating more jobs and growing our economy.' Originally published as Tourism Australia unveils $130m campaign with a focus on China