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The best of Sydney on a budget

Hit Bondi Beach or ride a ferry past the opera house

Image: Ferry riders, Sydney Opera House
Ferry riders take in the view and snap photos as they pass by the Sydney Opera House while riding on a harbor ferry in Sydney, Australia, on Jan. 6, 2009.
Rick Rycroft / AP file
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updated 5:50 p.m. ET Jan. 14, 2009

SYDNEY, Australia - Can you visit Down Under without the cost going up and over? Too right, mate.

Australia is a long way from just about everywhere else and the airfare alone will blow a big hole in any travel budget. But in Sydney, the country's largest city and one of its major draws, some of the best things to do and see are free, or nearly so.

The harbor
From the landmark Sydney Opera House and the harbor bridge to towering skyscrapers, parks and multimillion-dollar mansions, Sydney huddles around the glittering azure waters of Port Jackson.

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The best ways to see it all is by boat, though a charter cruise can cost thousands. Instead, why not take one of the ferries that shuffle workers to and from downtown each day? From Circular Quay, ride past the opera house, the former prison island of Fort Denison and some of the city's most exclusive properties (ask a local if they can point out Russell Crowe's apartment at Woolloomooloo) to Watson's Bay for about $3.55 return (5.20 Australian dollars), www.sydneyferries.info. Buy takeout fish and chips on the wharf and brave the seagulls on the small beach before retiring to the Watson's Bay Hotel beer garden to watch the sun set over the city skyline.

The icons
The white sails that form the roof of the Sydney Opera House make it one of the world's most recognizable buildings, and one of the greatest meldings of architecture and art. You can take a guided tour of the interior for about $19 (A$27.50) and hear the tragedy-tinged story of architect Joern Utzon's masterpiece. But the real appeal is the exterior, and it costs nothing to look. The thickest crowds are at dusk, when kids run up and slide down parts of the building and people mill around on the steps. Make a game of counting the minutes before a tourist asks you to snap his or her picture in front of the landmark.

From there, it's impossible to miss the Sydney Harbor Bridge, known locally as "The Coathanger" for reasons obvious to anyone who's seen it. Guided climbs to the apex are very popular, but prices start at about $122 (A$179). But you can walk across it at street level for nothing and still get a high-rise look at the opera house and the length of the harbor.

Image: surfing in Sydney
Rob Griffith / APi file
Thousands enjoy a hot day at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, on Jan. 6, 2009.

The beach

Bondi Beach, one of scores of crescent-shaped belts of sand that cut into the sandstone cliffs along Sydney's coastline, is one of the world's most famous. During summer, thousands vie for space in the sand to soak up sun rays or watch surfers show off. In winter, latte-slurpers huddle behind glass windows or under gas-fired heaters in the cafes and restaurants along the strip. Sydney's otherwise comprehensive rail network doesn't quite reach Bondi, but a combined train and bus "Link Ticket" will get you from Central Railway Station right to the promenade for about $5.20 (A$7.80) return.

When you're done with the sun, leave the look-at-me crowd of bodybuilders and bikini babes behind and hit the Bondi Icebergs club for a cold beer, pub-style food and a stunning view of the beach. If the traditional southerly afternoon buster (as the stiff wind here is called) is bringing in a storm front, there are few places better to watch thunderheads roll in from the sea. The southern end of Bondi also marks the start of a walking path that meanders along a spectacular coastline of sheer rock cliffs and beaches to Coogee about 4 miles away.


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