Why Tassie Country Life Still Has the Good Oil
The quiet Tassie life still knows how to win people ove
4 min readMar 29, 2026

There’s something about country life in Tasmania that gets under your skin in the best possible way. It is not trying to impress you. It is not yelling for attention. It is not standing there with a ring light, a personal brand strategy, and a flat white that costs as much as a small outboard motor. It just gets on with it. And honestly, that is half the charm.
Down here, the good life can still look pretty simple. A road lined with paddocks. A bakery that actually smells like a bakery. A town where someone will still give you a nod for no reason other than basic human decency. You can go from a historic village to a farm gate to a walking trail in the same day and still be home in time for a decent cuppa and a mutter about the weather. That slower pace is part of the official Tassie pitch too, with tourism material leaning hard into countryside farm gates, cellar doors, markets, and meeting the growers and makers behind it all.
That is what I like about it. Tassie country life does not feel overproduced. It feels lived in. You have got old pubs, weathered fences, proper local stories, and towns that still seem to know exactly what they are. Richmond, for example, still has more than 50 Georgian buildings, and its famous bridge dates back to 1825. Oatlands has Australia’s largest collection of sandstone Georgian buildings, with around 150 in town and 87 along the main street. That sort of place does not need a big sales pitch. It has already outlasted most modern trends.
And then there’s the little rituals of country Tassie that make the whole thing feel properly human. Markets are a big one. The Evandale Sunday Market is billed as Tasmania’s longest running and largest Sunday market, with fresh produce, handcrafts, antiques, collectables and food stalls. That tells you a lot about the place straight away. It is not just about buying stuff. It is about having a poke around, bumping into people, finding something you did not know you needed, and probably talking too long to someone selling jam, old tools, or a mystery object from 1974. That, to me, is first class entertainment.
Same goes for the farm gate culture. Tassie has made a real feature of it, especially in areas like the Huon Valley and the north west, where tourism material highlights small farms, artisan producers, and trail style tasting experiences. The north west’s Tasting Trail alone is promoted as a 50 stop run through cheese, fruit, salmon, hazelnuts, chocolate and more. That is not a bad way to spend a day unless you are on one of those health kicks that makes you suspicious of joy.
What makes it even better is that Tassie country life is not just heritage and food. It has got character. Sheffield reinvented itself as the Town of Murals and now has more than 160 murals across the town. So you can be driving through paddocks one minute and then suddenly you are in what is basically an outdoor art gallery with Mount Roland looking over the whole show. That is a very Tassie sort of move really. Quiet little town, no fuss, casually becomes iconic.
There is also the simple fact that nature is never very far away here. The Parks and Wildlife Service says it manages 806 reserves covering about 2.86 million hectares, or roughly 40 percent of the state’s land area, and it promotes 60 Great Short Walks across Tasmania. So even if your version of country living is not “owning a ute and fixing gates,” there is still a very good chance your ideal day involves getting out for a wander, seeing a bit of water, a few trees, maybe some wildlife, and coming home feeling like your head has been reset properly.
That, to me, is where Tassie really sneaks up on you. The country way of life is not just picturesque. It is practical. It gives you room. Room to think. Room to breathe. Room to remember that not every hour of the day needs to be monetised, gamified, or turned into some productivity lesson from a bloke online with suspiciously white teeth. Sometimes a good day is just a good day. A drive through the Midlands. A stop at a country café. A bit of antique fossicking in Evandale. A look around Richmond. Maybe a bakery item you absolutely did not need but fully deserved.
And yes, there is a cheeky side to all this too. Tassie country life can make you a bit smug if you are not careful. You start thinking things like, “Why would anyone live in a shoebox and queue for brunch when they could be down here having a proper scone and looking at ducks near a convict bridge?” It is a dangerous mindset. Once it gets hold of you, next thing you know you are defending weatherboard pubs, judging mainland traffic, and telling people they have never really relaxed until they have spent half an hour in a country town gift shop without buying a single thing.
Still, there is truth in it. The good side of Tassie life is not hard to find. It is in the pace. It is in the stories. It is in the mix of paddocks, old stone, murals, rivers, markets, local produce, and people who generally seem less interested in showing off and more interested in just getting on with life. That is a pretty attractive way to live.
So for a first post on The Current, here’s my view, not every good story has to be about chaos, outrage, or the latest thing falling apart. Sometimes the better story is that places like country Tasmania still exist at all. Places where life can still be a bit slower, a bit funnier, a bit friendlier, and a lot more grounded.
And really, in a world that carries on like a galah half the time, that feels less old fashioned and more like common sense.
