Walkabout Creek Hotel
When this pub opened its doors in the early years of the twentieth century, McKinlay was already a working outback town, and the Federal Hotel—as it was then known—became one of those essential gathering places where the country comes together. A century on, it carries the weight of that long tenure lightly, the kind of establishment where time moves differently, marked less by years than by the accumulation of stories, faces, and the slow weathering that only an Australian pub can achieve. The building itself was relocated in 1996, a practical gesture that speaks to the resourcefulness of outback life, but what remains constant is the atmosphere: that particular warmth that emerges when cold beer meets the heat of the interior, when locals and travellers find themselves on the same side of the bar. The pub found wider fame through the 1986 film *Crocodile Dundee*, when its fictional identity as Walkabout Creek Hotel lodged itself in the national imagination. The original movie bar still operates in the beer garden, a tangible link to that cinematic moment, though the place is quite content to exist as itself: a working pub in a working landscape, with eight taps pouring cold drinks and a menu that stretches to hot dinners most nights of the week. There is accommodation here too—rooms and a caravan park for those who want to linger—and the kind of friendly country atmosphere that doesn't announce itself loudly but simply settles around you as you walk in. This is a pub that belongs to its place, neither apologising for its age nor trading on it. The memorabilia on the walls tells its own tale, but the real story is in the everyday business of running a pub where people still come to eat, to drink, and to pass time in the manner that such places have always allowed.