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: Jane & Dave blow the budget



Posts filed under 'Campsites'

November 11th, 2008 - Dave says:

Heading back to Perth (Part 1)

I’m on my way back to WA and Jane! I finally finished up in Sydney - apologies to all the people I didn’t have a chance to catch up with - and hit the road this morning around 9am. It’s been a long day. I’m now camped at a little rest area off the Sturt Highway at Lake Benanee, with a small pack of grey nomads around me. 950 odd kms down, just over 3000 to go.

If you wanna see closeups of the map of the route I’ve taken so far, try this link.

October 14th, 2008 - Dave says:

The Daintree house


Daintree 2Daintree 3Daintree 4
Daintree 5Daintree 6Daintree 7

Last week we spent in luxury - we rented a holiday house at Cow Bay in the Daintree with Matt, Bec, and Lesley and, Matts sister and her partner flew up for a few days too. The house was massive, an open-plan all timber construction surrounded by lush vegetation and wildlife. It also had a pool table and swimming pool, and about a million cosy nooks, chairs or hammocks to just relax and read in.

October 2nd, 2008 - Dave says:

Far North Queensland catch-up…


Cape Trib 1Cape Trib 4Cape Trib 3

A bit of a catch-up is probably in order here… after Paluma Range National Park, we headed back to the coast and north to Mission Beach, a small touristy town near Dunk Island. We didn’t stay in Mission Beach itself, rather at the next bay along, called Bingil Bay, in a small council-run park right on the beach. That’s where we caught up with Matt and Bec again, after having split paths with them before Townsville. They headed further north to Cairns the next day, while we stayed on for 4 days there.

After Bingil Bay we cruised north to Cairns, where we had to pick up Lesley (Jane’s mum, who’s spending a couple of weeks traveling with us) - but rather than stay in Cairns itself, we headed about 20 minutes further north to Palm Cove. Palm Cove is a ritzy tourist town, full of resorts, and holiday units, but there is a small council run campground right in the northern corner, on the beach. We caught up with Matt and Bec again here. While I’m on about Palm Cove, I need to mention the food - there’s some world class restaurants here, including Nu Nu, which got the Gourmet Traveller Regional Restaurant of the Year 2008 gong. We’d stopped here for crab sandwiches 3+ years ago, when we flew up for a long weekend, and were blown away by the place… good to see it seems to only have gotten better in the interim.

From Palm Cove (with Lesley safely arrived) we left Matt and Bec at Palm Cove and headed further north, up the coast via Port Douglas (just detoured in for a quick look) and across the Daintree River on the ferry. We cruised through the rainforest, and headed up as far as Cape Tribulation, where we set up camp for 2 nights in the Jungle Lodge - mainly cabins, but a few really nice campsites in the rainforest. The photos above are from Myall Beach at Cape Trib (south of the cape).

We got into Cooktown late yesterday afternoon, after a pretty tiring day’s travel… we’d done the Bloomfield Track, which is a 4WD track through the Daintree from Cape Trib up to Cooktown - not far, but hard on the car, with the steepest hills I’ve ever seen, and the trailer like a dead weight trying to pull us back down. There’s a couple of river crossings too, nothing too bad unless you’re attempting it in a Ford Falcon - we got to one crossing to find a queue backed up and a bunch of people trying to push the Ford out of the river on the other side. They’d made it most of the way, then hit a submerged rock, stalled, and presumably drowned it trying to restart in the water. I jumped in and helped push - the back of the car had copped a hammering from everyone pushing too - there’s nowhere solid to push, as the bumper is fibreglass and the boot panels really flimsy, so they had panel damage and a broken tail-light too, not to mention whatever the rocks had done to the undercarriage. Despite the car being cactus, they seemed pretty casual and cheerful about it all.

At the end of the Bloomfield Track, just before it joins up with the main highway near Cooktown is Helenvale, a tiny community that is home to the historic Lions Den Hotel, a cool old pub in the spirit of the Daly Waters pub in the NT. We’d had a night up here the last time we were up this way, so stopped off for lunch and a beer, before heading in to Cooktown.

September 5th, 2008 - Dave says:

Katherine, NT

We spent yesterday canoeing Katherine Gorge in Nitmiluk NP (about 30kms outside the town of Katherine itself) - as with all these gorges, pretty magical.

Gotta say this about NT national parks, the facilities are pretty damn good - hot water showers, camp kitchens, drinking water, flushing toilets, the works… and no entry fees or passes, just (reasonable) camping fees. Compared to most east coast national parks, where they charge you a fortune and barely provide a longdrop loo. Not saying that we need all the facilities (and often it’s good to be as self-sufficient as possible), but it’s an interesting comparison - says a lot about how important tourism is in areas like Kakadu.

Today we’re resupplying in Katherine town (pretty depressing place, we were here the other day and the streets seemed to get pretty rough after dark - lot of drunken arguments and shouting going on)… anyways, after this we’re on the road across the gulf, heading for (official) cane toad territory (Queensland).

September 1st, 2008 - Dave says:

The Cobourg Peninsula, NT

Cobourg 4Cobourg 2Cobourg 3

We spent around 5 days hanging out at Smiths Point on the Cobourg Peninsula (also called Garig Gunak Barlu National Park), which I think is the second most-furthest north point you can get to on mainland Australia (just under 11 degrees south of the equator - in comparison, the tip of Cape York is about 50kms further north).
You need to get a permit to say up here (you need to cross Arnhem Land) and I think in recent years they’ve closed sections of it off, so now there’s only the one area you can visit. On top of this, in 2005 the whole area got devastated by a cyclone - at the moment, the bush looks pretty trashed, with heaps of trees down. Still, it’s a nice area - not spectacular, but worth a visit - and would be magic if you had a boat to explore the other bays and the rest of the coastline (with some serious crocodile action up here, the canoe doesn’t cut it).

The fishing is pretty good too - true to form however, we didn’t do so well; Jane bagged a brace of squid one night, and I got a flathead and a diamond trevally another day. But we lost a lot of gear on snags and rocks - and no-one was going to risk their life retrieving it :)
Oh, and we met up again with Stewie and Coral - they got up there the day before we left.

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