Tasmania 6 Nights 7 Days Wild Island Tour takes travelers across Tasmania, the island state south of mainland Australia. Over seven days and six nights this small‑group, eco‑certified journey departs from Hobart City, TAS, Australia and stitches together glacially carved highlands, temperate rainforests, and the white granite beaches of the east coast. Highlights include Cradle Mountain inside the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, the orange lichen fields of the Bay of Fires, Wineglass Bay in Freycinet National Park, and the convict-era ruins at Port Arthur. Each day balances active walking—Dove Lake circuits and Marion’s Lookout at Cradle, coastal tracks across granite headlands at Freycinet—with scenic drives through Franklin‑Gordon Wild Rivers and visits to rainforest waterfalls like Russell Falls. The west coast segment reaches Strahan and offers optional excursions on Macquarie Harbour and the Gordon River, where rainforest, peatlands, and ancient river systems reveal Tasmania’s geological story of glaciation and Gondwana fragments. Wildlife encounters are a constant thread: wallabies and pademelons hop at dusk, seabird colonies ride the eastern swell, and Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary showcases Tasmanian devils and other endemic species. The itinerary includes coastal towns such as Bicheno for penguin spotting, the sculptured Cataract Gorge near Launceston, and the wine and farming landscapes around Richmond and Coal River Valley on the approach to Hobart. Hyundai Travel acts as the booking intermediary for this tour; the local operator runs daily logistics and guides, and final meeting point details are supplied after booking. Group size is deliberately small—maximum 22 people—so mornings feel like private drives and huts and lookouts are less crowded than on independent itineraries. Practical notes: pack layered rain gear and sturdy boots for alpine trails, binoculars for wildlife viewing, and a camera with a wide lens for coastal panoramas. Weather can swing fast between sun, wind, and rain—particularly at Kunanyi / Mount Wellington and Cradle Mountain—so choose flexible footwear and expect shorter, sharper storms rather than steady heat. Culturally, the tour touches sites within the island’s deep Aboriginal and colonial histories—Port Arthur’s convict ruins sit alongside landscapes with millennia of Indigenous story. This route is ideal for travelers who want a compact immersion in Tasmania’s varied geologies and ecosystems without the logistic churn of self-driving, and for photographers seeking dramatic contrasts from dolerite columns to coastal granite and orange lichen. Book through Hyundai Travel using the provided referral link and expect an itinerary that mixes walking, wildlife viewing, and coastal sightseeing with local interpretation of natural and historical sites. For visitors based in Hobart, this is one of the most efficient ways to see Tasmania’s interior peaks, west coast rainforests, and east coast bays in a single, well-paced week. Expect variable temperatures; travel insurance is strongly recommended for peace.