I tread water for a couple of minutes to get my breath back, and then feebly propel myself forward as the waves deliver a series of stinging salty slaps.
My guide shouts: ‘Put your head in the water!’
I am transported to a calm, eerie underwater world. And there, out of the gloom, a large dark object is heading straight towards me.
I stare transfixed at this oncoming behemoth before my guide grabs my hand and pulls me out of its path, motioning for me to follow her as she swims alongside it.
After a couple of minutes, our formidable companion begins to dive, its pattern of white spots and stripes slowly dissolving into the murky abyss – and our pursuit is over as quickly as it began.
I have just, rather unsuccessfully, tried to keep pace with a whale shark – the world’s largest fish.
The location for my close encounter is the Ningaloo Reef, near the coast of Western Australia.
Humans, thankfully, are not part of their diet, so it is safe to swim with these docile creatures. Companies like Three Islands Whale Shark Dive operate daily boat tours during whale shark season, using a small plane to locate them.
And at no point should you ever to try to touch them (not surprisingly, it is easy for awe-struck tourists to become distracted, and find themselves a little too close for comfort).
Whale sharks are a protected species in Australia, but very little is known about their migratory patterns or life cycle – so the images that our Three Islands tour guide takes, using a hi-tech underwater camera, will be used for research purposes.
This time, we swim alongside the eight-metre-long fish for more than 10 minutes, as it glides through the water, not far below the surface. Shafts of sunlight dance across its patterned skin, and its giant letterbox mouth gobbles up plankton as a shoal of fish darts about in the slip-stream, hoping for a free lunch.
It is an ethereal, formidable and utterly mesmerising sight.
Ningaloo Reef is located in the Ningaloo Marine Park, which stretches out for 260km, from Amherst Point near Coral Bay, up to Bundegi Reef near Exmouth – in the far north west of the country. It is the largest, most accessible reef in Australia, and it became a Unesco World Heritage site in 2011.
Along with whale sharks, visitors can also spot humpback whales between June and November.
The park is a daunting expanse, difficult to tackle single-handedly. So I sign-up for a Ningaloo Safari Tour, led by local guide Dave Mongan.
We drive past the sun-scorched landscape of Shothole Canyon and Charles Knife Gorge, before stopping at Vlamingh Head Lighthouse – where Dave boils up tea in a billycan and serves it with a slice of his wife’s fruit cake.
Then it is on to an old naval base – where a solitary kangaroo is the only sign of life among the abandoned Sixties military buildings – before we take another pit-stop at Osprey Bay, a glorious little cove where I dig my toes into the white sand and watch the sea creep up the shore, as Dave prepares a lunch of sandwiches and freshly-caught prawns.
The camp has been designed to be as eco-friendly as possible so is run on solar power. There are no TVs, telephones or minibars.
You do, however, have a proper bed, an en-suite bathroom with a shower and three meals a day, cooked fresh and served in the camp’s laid-back open-air restaurant.
Those who baulk at the price tag but prefer to retain some home comforts can head to the four-star Novotel Ningaloo Resort, in Exmouth’s new marina development.
Its sleek, modern apartments and bungalows offer king-size beds, spa baths, power showers and private balconies from £170 per night.
Flights to Exmouth run daily from Perth, Australia’s fourth largest city (and, with over 300 days of sunshine a year, its weather capital).
As the city is right on the coast, Perth boasts beautiful beaches, including the famous Cottesloe Beach, which was the actor Heath Ledger’s favourite spot for surfing. A pristine strip of sand, it is one of the highlights of my outing with Canadian Ryan Mossny, who set up his walking tour business – Two Feet & A Heartbeat – in 2007, after noticing a gap in the market.
Just offshore is Rottnest Island, which used to be an Aboriginal penal colony, but is now a tourist’s paradise. No cars are allowed on the island, so the most popular way to move around is by bike.
Visitors can try their hand at snorkelling, scuba diving or kayaking. There is also the chance to view the annual migration of humpback whales. And it is the only place in the world where you can find the ‘quokka’ – an adorably cute 12-inch tall marsupial.
But be warned. If you see a large dark object coming towards you, fin aloft – swim the other way. It is unlikely to be as friendly as the gentle giants of Ningaloo Reef.
Travel Facts
Tailor Made Travel (0845 456 8050, www.tailor-made.co.uk) offers a seven-night Western Australia package from £1989 per person – which includes return flights London to Perth on Qatar Airways, return flights from Perth to Ningaloo on Skywest, three night’s accommodation in the Crown Plaza Perth, and four nights in the Novotel Ningaloo.The price is based on two people sharing a double room.
Return flights to Perth with Qatar Airways start from £847, departing London Heathrow in February 2012. Flights to Perth are also available from Manchester Airport from just £852 return.
For enquiries or to book, go to www.qatarairways.com or call 0870 389 8090.
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