After leaving Atherton Tablelands we headed for Cairns and had another catchup with Geoff and Vicki. Then we spent three nights at Fishery Falls south of Cairns. Nice restful weekend and another waterfall! Also got live music and a nice Thai dinner, prepared by the park’s Thai owners, in the CP (caravan park) on Saturday night.
Finished off some errands in Cairns and decided to see Kuranda and return to Mareeba. For a popular tourist destination Kuranda was pretty empty. We visited the Australian Butterfly Sanctuary – no tours running because of Covid, but we saw lots of beautiful butterflies and learned some interesting butterfly facts. The Sanctuary is the largest butterfly aviary in the southern hemisphere, and was established in 1987. They raise approximately 23,000 butterflies per year in a quarantined laboratory.
In Mareeba we found a place we liked (Trinity Plains), not crowded and they didn’t push us out at 10am. so we kept coming back. Had a good rest day; ie two loads of washing, a uke practice and we got the blog out. The next stop was an isolated station stay at Karma Waters on the Mitchell River, with Chris and Chris.
Two nights of remoteness was enough so we all went on to Cooktown and stayed in Endeavour Falls caravan park, where we got another waterfall and we also got more private camping as the place was almost deserted.
Since we’d been to Cooktown in 2017, there wasn’t a lot to see, but we needed to get more stuff for my bites and caught the end of the Saturday market.
That evening we joined Geoff and Vicki at another Cooktown campground where we cooked together in the camp kitchen.
From Cooktown we headed to Elim Beach which was supposed to be a nice place to camp and is located beside the Coloured Sands. The campground is owned by an aboriginal elder, Eddie. It was quite crowded when we were there and not so appealing.
After another overnight stay in our favourite park in Mareeba, we headed for Tully Gorge National Park (NP) and were faced with more “bug wars”. Gave ourselves a rest day, did a short ‘butterfly walk’ near our camp, so learned more about butterflies and saw heaps there. Drove along Tully Gorge to various lookout spots.
Townsville felt like an abrupt return to civilisation as we stayed in a CP in the centre of town and even ate out in a crowded restaurant. As soon as we’d done our errands and phone calls, we headed out to another NP for a night.
Our next destination was a sculpture trail we had heard about. It was so good, we’re giving it a blog post of its own.
One thought on “North to Cooktown and starting the trip south……”
Hi Pat and Dick,
So many waterfalls, rivers, beaches….. and you’re not in any of them. Not in the water I mean, rather than the photos. Is that due to crocs?
Beautiful photos though, especially of the butterflies.
And I love the baby emus – lucky you saw them. Emus don’t have huge heads (and therefore brains) do they?
Keep on enjoying yourselves.
If all goes well, I might be able to use my camper for a couple of weeks in mid November. Let’s hope mum lands in the nursing home this time rather than the hospital!
L
F
Hi Pat and Dick,
So many waterfalls, rivers, beaches….. and you’re not in any of them. Not in the water I mean, rather than the photos. Is that due to crocs?
Beautiful photos though, especially of the butterflies.
And I love the baby emus – lucky you saw them. Emus don’t have huge heads (and therefore brains) do they?
Keep on enjoying yourselves.
If all goes well, I might be able to use my camper for a couple of weeks in mid November. Let’s hope mum lands in the nursing home this time rather than the hospital!
L
F