Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Top quality service - will continue to use DialAFlight
Ashley was excellent as always.
Scott has been very professional and helpful. Deeply appreciated
Everything went just as it should!
Absolutely delighted with all the arrangements. DialAFlight have always provided excellent service at a competitive price and Samuel in particular has been superb
Hannah looked after us with 5 star service
Thanks Ed and your team for all your help - we had an amazing time in Florida and the villa was perfect.
I had great service and was very well informed at all times.
Patrick helped us including whilst we were away. Fantastic service and it all went without a hitch. The app is really helpful.
Very good service.
Thank you again Connie for another successful trip.
Amy was brilliant and i wouldn't hesitate using you again
A brilliant travel company - we wouldn’t even contemplate using anybody else. Always our ‘go to’ for any foreign travel and the service/response you are given is immediate, efficient and (in our case) endlessly patient!
I recommend your business to everyone I travel with. I find the information I receive with the paperwork excellent. Thank you, as always, wonderful job.
Excellent service. The app is useful too
Chloe is an amazing travel agent! We wouldn't use anyone else! She tries her utmost to accommodate our many needs and answer our millions of questions.
Orlando was outstanding! Great advice, patient, and when there was a problem he resolved it. When he was away the emergency number and email worked. Would definitely use again and recommend. thanks you
Harry and the team delivered a first class service when we needed a very immediate travel solution. The reason why we have used DialAFlight for so many years !
Good pricing and did a lot to support in difficult circumstances, thank you
All went very smoothly
Just as excellent as ever!
Sean, is brilliant. Endlessly patient and supportive, invested in making sure I get the best possible travel arrangements and deal.
DialAFlight are so committed to serving the customer. James and Callum really take away any hassles that come your way. Really good guys to do business with, just at the end of the phone. Highly recommend
Dealing with DialAFlight is always a great experience and have been using Glen for a number of years. I have recommended to several people who have also been very happy with your service.
Always very pleased with the service from DialAFlight. The staff are amazing too.
Ryan is the most helpful travel agent I know.
Despite request for rooms close together we were about as far away as was possible but Ikos did upgrade us to better rooms for last two nights. However, overall excellent.
Thank you. Five stars
Will continue to book all our flights through DialAFlight. Helen Jones has always given us excellent service over the last 20 years. Her dedication to her customers is the very best.
We had a brilliant trip - thank you so much!
The Great Ocean Road. Its name alone sounds leagues cooler than any of the world's bucket-list road trips. And that's before you've even begun to appreciate the vast beaches, towering limestone cliffs, and sparkling eucalyptus forests that make this Australian coast road so special.
The highway hugs the underbelly of the state of Victoria, linking Melbourne to the east with the old port city of Warrnambool to the west, threading through a series of seaside towns.
Once settlements for gold rush diggers, these ports now throng with wetsuit-clad holidaymakers in summer (Nov to Feb) and have their own wild charm in winter.
Coaches 'do' The Road in a day, but I opt for a small group tour, which spreads the journey over a night or two and is happy to go off-piste.
'Our tours are all about the detours,' says our guide Jeremy, a walking library of stories, anecdotes and Aboriginal folklore.
Jeremy scoots around Melbourne to collect me and the Scots – a 60-something couple from Aberdeen who are nearing the end of a six-week visit to Oz. And then we're off.
Our first stop is Geelong. It was the old mayor of this port city who, in 1918, decided to build a tourist route to rival California's Big Sur. He enlisted 3,000 ex-servicemen and set them to work, ignoring the government's fear that such a road 'would encourage invaders'. (The country was still licking its war wounds).
HARD YAKKA
For 15 years the soldiers toiled away with their picks and shovels, hacking into the craggy hillside.
Hard yakka, as the Aussies would say. Peering down sheer cliff faces, I imagine such a soothing ocean-scape must have offered better post-traumatic rehabilitation than any therapist.
My neck aches from looking out of the window as we travel west towards Torquay, birthplace of surfing brand Quiksilver. We're here over Easter, prime surf season, and the annual Rip Curl championships – the longest running surf contest in the world – are in full swing.
Jeremy slows down the van to let a woman cross the road, her salty hair dripping on to her face, and tanned arms holding a surfboard. 'That's Stephanie Gilmore,' he says casually. 'Six-time world champion Australian surfer.'
I get the impression that such a sighting is commonplace so I give a breezy nod, but my inner surfer is dancing with excitement. Onwards to Anglesea, where I see my first kangaroo over on the local golf course.
These animals are so robust, Jeremy says, that 'they do little more than blink when hit by a golf ball'.
A few minutes further on is Kennett River, where I stand with my arms outstretched holding handfuls of sunflower seeds as four iridescent parrots land on my head and shoulders. 'Would you like a turn?' Jeremy asks the Scots, but they're too busy oohing and aahing over a koala snoozing in the nook of a tree above us.
Next is Lorne, with its strip of surf shops, second-hand bookshops and organic juice cafes.
A young hipster in Ray-Bans and bare feet strums Van Morrison on his guitar while overlooking the sands where children trip over the cords of their boogie boards.
Their professional counter-parts, meanwhile, sit straddling surfboards well out to sea, bobbing nonchalantly on the swell, waiting for a wave worth riding. Engrossed in watching them, I trip on a cockatoo taking a stroll along the promenade, its little yellow mohican perfectly coiffed.
APOLLO BAY
We spend the night at Beacon Point Ocean View Villas, luxury cabins in the hills above Apollo Bay, and feast on fresh fish at Chris's Restaurant with a front row view of the waves in the dusk.
The next morning we reach the legendary Twelve Apostles – a cluster of giant limestone stacks protruding from the water, their bottoms nibbled by the waves.
The Twelve Apostles provide stark evidence that the coastline of Australia must be eroding at a rate of knots. An arch called London Bridge, sculpted over the centuries, collapsed so suddenly a few years ago that a group of tourists found themselves stranded on the seaward side and had to be helicoptered to safety.
Our final stop is Loch Ard Gorge, where the wreck of the Loch Ard ship was tossed ashore by a fearsome storm in the winter of 1878. Jeremy takes out an old wooden chest from the van – inside which are black-and-white photographs of the only two survivors of the disaster, a newspaper article about the wreckage, and a handful of rusty spoons from the ship.
Turning these barnacle-clad utensils in my hand, I muse that over two days, my notion that Australia offers little by way of history has sunk faster than the vessel itself.
First published in the Daily Mail - January 2017
More articles below...
Not quite what you're looking for?
We can easily customise an offer to suit your exact requirements