The World Heritage listed Daintree Rainforest is across the aptly named Daintree River. We take the ferry across and find our way to a camping ground at Cape Kimberley.
The camping ground pretty run down and still not recovered from Cyclone Ita, but the beach is beautiful and there’s only about six other groups camped here. We camp just behind the palm trees and can hear the ocean all night.
And this next pic is for Alison, because I know she’ll appreciate the art of the crabs at Cape Kimberley.
The boys plan to paddle out to Snapper Island in the morning and do some snorkelling on the small reef around the island. But the plan is foiled when the rain comes down and the wind blows up to 30km/h.
Everyone keeps telling us it shouldn’t still be raining up here, but that’s not news to us. It’s getting a bit annoying.
I have never been to Cape Tribulation but I’ve always had a vision of a small jetty bathed in sunshine adjoining a bustling hub of trendy cafes and dive shops offering scuba courses and tourist options aplenty and someone selling beautiful handcrafted chopping boards. So I was somewhat underwhelmed to find that Cape Tribulation is a small cape, as capes go, and there is no actual town. It’s dark here and the multitude of accommodation options are all hidden in the thick rainforest, spread along 40-50km of road that meanders along the coast. You’re not really sure if you’ve arrived. And the mizzle keeps coming. Back in Cairns, you can take a full days trip out to the reef for snorkelling and scuba trips but we decided to take one of the trips here in Cape Tribulation which has only small groups and is a half day. But…….when we roll in to book it, they have nothing available for two days – and we’ll be gone by then.They promote these trips far and wide.
Maybe this was meant to be. It’s still windy out there, and we did some amazing snorkelling on the Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia. Que sera.
We did some discovering in the rainforest though. There are a few great boardwalks through the trees and mangroves. Below is one of the huge basket ferns growing on a tree. It must have been over a metre across.
We did visit the actual Cape Tribulation beach where poor old Captain Cook’s tribulations started. My tribulations have started too. Right there under the mangroves at low tide (what was I thinking?) it was the Mozzie Massacre of the Rainforest. This will be the way for me for the next couple of weeks. I have defences on this trip – unlike the Massacre I endured at East Alligator River in 2013.