Travel Blog | Daintree Rainforest Australia | 10th Anniversary Holiday

in #travelblog6 years ago

My wife and I recently celebrated our 10 year wedding anniversary up in the Daintree Rainforest, 140 km’s north of Cairns in Australia. We are local Aussies, coming from Townsville which is just a few hours south of Cairns. While this area is not new to us, we still absolutely love it and try and go there as often as possible. The Daintree Rainforest is named after Richard Daintree, an Australia geologist and photographer (1832-1878), and consists of approximately 1200 square kilometres of tropical rainforests which have been largely untouched for millions of years. This amazing place is listed as a World Heritage site and the only place on Earth where two World Heritage sites meet, being the Daintree Rainforest and the Great Barrier Reef.

Daintree Small.jpg
This panorama was taken half-way up the Bump Track hiking trail.

North Queensland is a spectacular place if you wish to visit to see largely untouched rainforest and beautiful pristine beaches. There are many species of animals native to these rainforests and it is wonderful that we have not destroyed this area. You only have to spend a short amount of time in the rainforest to really feel connected with our Earth and appreciate the diversity of this planet. Home to many native species of birds, mammals and reptiles with notable animals such as the Southern Cassowary and Saltwater Crocodile.

We spent some time in Cape Tribulation which is a short barge ride across the Daintree river which is home to a very large number of Saltwater Crocodiles. I have been told by tour guides that the numbers of saltwater crocodiles are raising to the point where crocodiles are fighting for dominance in their area which leaves many to leave the Daintree River swim out to sea and along the coast to find other rivers to live in. We have been on a crocodile boat tour before and it is really quite spectacular and also a bit frightening to see the Saltwater Crocodiles swimming in the murky brown water and laying still like logs in the sun on the riverbank. They truly are a modern day dinosaur.

saltwater-crocodile-1226659_960_720.jpg
Source - cute and cuddly crocodile

While driving on the road at Cape Tribulation my wife and I saw a Daddy cassowary with his chicks. We can mostly assume this Cassowary would be the father as We have heard that the Southern Cassowary males rear the infants while the female Cassowary moves on to lay eggs in the nests of several other males. Cassowaries predominantly eat fruits, flowers, fungi, frogs, birds, fish and mice. They are a large bird however they are smaller than both the Ostrich and the Emu. Cassowaries are occasionally aggressive and could easily kill a small animal such as a dog but while they have been known to sometimes attack humans I have read there has only been one ever documented death.

Cass.jpg

cassowary-245192_960_720.jpg

Source - Cassowary looking like an evolved Pokemon

The place my wife and I stayed in the Daintree Rainforest was a place called the Daintree Eco Lodge & Spa which was very nice and peaceful as all occupants have their own small modern style cabin to stay in. the food was very delicious and while there wasn't many options to choose from there was a decent variety in styles of food and they had meals catering for vegans. the other meals were foods such as beef rib fillets, kangaroo steaks and various chicken meals though I can't comment on these as I just ate the amazing mushroom risotto. My wife enjoyed a 3 hour massage so I just sat in the room, did some drawing and stretching and meditated for about 90mins, absorbing the energy of the rainforest.

01.jpg
Source

AU10070228-Daintree-Eco-Lodge.jpg

Source

20180201_074530.jpg
Nice place to chill and enjoy the sounds of nature. I really enjoyed the minimalism of this place.

20180201_083521.jpg
My lovely wife enjoying our morning fruit platter. Crispy banana cake for the win :)

While we were at the Daintree Rainforest we visited Mossman Gorge which is part of the traditional homeland of the indigenous Kuku yalanji people. here we walked through the rainforest on a track which was approximately 2.4 km and crossed a few creeks and while there was no wildlife we got to see many native plants in this region.As with much of Australia Mossman Gorge was discovered due to gold. my when we enjoying the water in a small water hole that this and glittered like gold so maybe she was right. Mossman Gorge has a fairly interesting history of clashes between the Aboriginals who own this land and the white European settlers who tried to take over the lands for the gold and minerals.

20180203_084805.jpg
Hello there Miss Praying Mantis. I say Miss because apparently they bite the heads of males... brutal!

20180201_101247.jpg
Awesome metal possum sculpture at Mossman Gorge.

20180201_102906.jpg
My wife glowing in the sunshine beaming through the rainforest canopy.

20180201_110357.jpg
It's times like this that I truly feel the beauty of life!

20180201_103638.jpg



End of Part 1... follow me for Part 2 coming soon!





Sort:  

What a great get-away, looks like an awesome refresher! Big congrats to you and your wife on 10 years of marriage!

bird 25.jpg

Thanks @artzanolino it was awesome :)

What a great place to spend your anniversary.

I love that region of the world.

So lucky to see a Cassowary. In all the time I spent in the forest, I am yet to see one. And with chicks! Lucky you.
Are there still crocs in the Ross river and Creek? Used to see smaller ones below the Oonoomba rail bridge in the mangroves a lot too. I used to fish with the son of the owner of Goodall's Wreckers down there a fair bit. Good times.

Hey @andyfishman yeah it was too nice, didn't want to come back!

We've seen a Cassowary with chicks once before at another place we stayed at (I forget the name) but the day came literally within feet of me while I was collecting firewood. He just looked at me and walked away, chicks in tow. The owners of the place had told us they often come here so I wasn't scared, just caught me off guard. Surreal exeperience seeing them in the wild and very lucky :)

There's been a few croc sightings off Palarenda and even the Strand. Oonoonba bridge was where the old meatworks was so yeah no doubt about that! I used to graffiti under that bridge lol always keeping ears out for people and crocs. I think there's gotta still be freshwater crocs in Ross River but I have never seen any.

Yeah, saw a good size one off the rockpool at the strand when we were down there for a swim one night.

Congratulations, Your Post Has Been Added To The Steemit Worldmap!
Author link: http://steemitworldmap.com?author=spaceginger
Post link: http://steemitworldmap.com?post=travel-blog-or-daintree-rainforest-australia-or-10th-anniversary-holiday


Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Steemitworldmap
  • Click the code slider at the bottom
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!

Gorgeous photos! And such a warm and beautiful post <3 Grats to you and wifey for 10 years and here's hoping for more happy days to come for both of you and your children <3

upvotes

Looking forward to Part 2!!! :D

I literally just came back from the Daintree! For a Cairns local, I'm ashamed to say it was my first time. It's bloody beautiful and I'm incredibly lucky to live in such a special part of the world. I'm in the process of doing up my vlog. Looks like a lovely way to spend your anniversary!

We ended our 2 month (almost) Oz roadtrip in Cairns about 2 years ago, didn't get further north (I'll explain why in a minute), so it was really great to see your story and photos.

Half our trip was driving from Adelaide to Cairns, about 5600 kms. Most Aussies we met asked 'Why?'. Well we wanted to see things and meet people, and you can't do that from 30,000 feet. We are used to long distances in Canada, for example it's almost the same distance round-trip from our home to friends in Florida, and we do that in 6 days total, so 5600 km in Oz in 32 days - some days just chilling on the Gold Coast for example - was not a big deal for us. And we did see things and meet people - you can find my posts of Oz (and NZ too) on worldmap.

Following.

Woahhhh that's such a long drive @brightongreg! You're absolutely right, Australia (and any country for that matter) is best experienced on the land cos you never know what you might see. I'll take a look at your posts for sure. A quick look shows you obviously travel a lot! Good on ya.

I was concerned that strict speed enforcement would impact some of our longer stints but was pleasantly surprised to find out it's relaxing to drive when everyone is doing 99 kph and no-one - like in North America - is on your bumper flashing their lights or actually passing you on the wrong side! And the trivia signs in QLD -'Are we there yet?', 'What's the State flower?' - were brilliant! Make sure you check out Australia #18 pinned at Airlie Beach - my uncharacteristic poor planning en route will hopefully make you laugh...
Not traveling this winter unfortunately due to some minor health issues which need tending to but I am warm indoors planning next year's winter escape!
Safe travels.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.28
TRX 0.12
JST 0.032
BTC 62267.50
ETH 2992.33
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.71