Tasmania, Bass Strait, Melbourne and Sydney
Holyman’s Airways grew from Tasmania in the 1930s, connecting maritime family roots, postal contracts and early regular passenger services to the mainland.
The plan turns the 1935 brochure into three clear services: Hobart - Melbourne via King Island, Melbourne - Sydney via Canberra, and Launceston - Melbourne via Flinders Island.
Australian aviation structures its main links.
Tasmanian and maritime roots.
Two possible moods for the same network.
Headlands, islands, lighthouses and towns pace the flight.
Understanding the flight
The original charm comes from the brochure: it describes landmarks to reassure and interest passengers. In the simulator, those details become the flight itself.
So resist direct GPS. Coasts, islands, reservoirs, mining towns and bays tell the story of 1930s Australia.
Before departure
- Choose the aircraft by chapter: DH 86 for atmosphere, DC-2 for a more modern line.
- Prepare the maritime legs with readable weather and coastal alternates.
- Use the timetable as a guide without sacrificing safety.
- Review visual references before departure so the route does not become a simple heading.
Suggested route
Experience tips
The plan becomes much richer if you follow the landmarks described in the article rather than a direct line.
Bass Strait should remain impressive: keep believable weather and real fuel reserve.
© Michel Lagneau 2017
