Gourmet Traveller (Australia)

HOW I TRAVEL

The host of Australia’s longest-running travel show on serendipit­y and a life spent in perpetual motion.

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Catriona Rowntree on a life spent in perpetual motion.

I’m from a long line of travellers.

My great-great-great-grandfathe­r, Thomas Stephenson Rowntree, was a ship captain who brought the first paying (as opposed to penal) customers to Australia. I think he’d look at me – I’ve been travelling profession­ally for 23 years, can you believe – and think: chip off the old block. My Scottish grandfathe­r, Andrew, was a world traveller. I can’t recall a childhood holiday spent at home – Mum and Dad would hire a Halvorsen each Easter, a beach house each summer, or take the four kids on epic drives.

My parents’ perpetual motion and sense of adventure set me up beautifull­y for this way of life.

There’s no airs or graces behind the scenes at Getaway. I’m often changing in bathrooms at petrol stations or in the back of a car. My needs are pretty simple – I need clean, yes, but I don’t need anything too flash.

I travel constantly and always to vastly different places,

but if there’s a theme to my best trips it’s always about the people I meet, those who’ve thrown out the rule book and are living life on their own terms, whether it’s a salmon fisherman in Ketchikan or the woman I met in the Cook Islands running a stand-up paddleboar­ding business. That’s the real joy of my job.

I think the tiny Buddhist kingdom of Bhutan changed me

as a traveller and as a person, if only to wholeheart­edly understand that what you put into your life is what you’ll get back. I can honestly say I came back a better person. And I have to sing the praises of the Kimberley region in Western Australia. I took my two sons on a Top End cruise for my new book. The beauty of the Kimberley brought me to tears: so many stories, so much history, so worth the effort.

The boys travel with me all the time.

One loves activities and being busy; the younger is much like me – he loves art and is happy exploring quietly. My job is to help them find what makes their hearts sing.

I’m often woken between 2am and 4am

– it might be the bush turkey outside my room, or a taxi downstairs, so I always pack an eye mask and ear plugs. And my driver’s licence, so I’m good to go anywhere in the world; Wet Ones – I’ll always drop something on my clothes; an Anlaby woollen wrap, because I freeze on planes and I’m married to a wool grower; and a fold-out bag for extra shopping. And I take my vitamins, but I’m armourplat­ed. I never get sick on the road.

I’d love to go to Chile.

I don’t know the Scandinavi­an countries very well. And I’ve never been to Japan. The most annoying thing, as any passionate traveller knows, is that the bucket list is never ending.

I love the fact that Australian­s around the world have a reputation,

certainly in the cruise industry, as innovators and gamechange­rs. Australian companies really have changed the way the world cruises, and our love affair with the cruise holiday is incredible – Australia is the biggest per-capita cruise market in the world.

I’m always hopeful for what the year ahead holds

but I generally don’t know what’s ahead of me until the last moment. I love the serendipit­y of that.

The Best of World Cruising by Catriona Rowntree (Hardie Grant Books, $35) is out 1 March. Getaway returns to Nine on 16 February at 5.30pm.

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