Tuesday, June 17, 2014

North through Queensland

After Byron Bay, we just went north, north, north up the Queensland coast. We took a couple of lovely walks among the Glass House Mountains, which are 25-million-year-old volcanic plugs (i.e., just my kind of thing).
 

SR got to continue his "big things" photo series with some of the tropical fruits of the area (pineapple and mango, here).



There are a gazillion things to do on the Queensland coast, and a gazillion tour operators eager to sell you trips to do these things. As we tried to get a mental grasp on all the options for Fraser Island, the Whitsundays, the Great Barrier Reef, and so on, things were complicated by some unfortunate weather rolling in. Clouds and wind and unusually cool temperatures had even the eager tour operators telling us we'd be wasting our money going out on the water in these conditions. So we decided to delay all decision-making until the weather forecast improved, and in the meantime, just focus on driving north and collecting what info we could so that by the time we made the same trip back south, we might have a better idea of where and how to spend our money.

So for several days, we were mostly just driving. Luckily, we found some really fantastic (and free!) places to park the campervan for the night along the coast. This is moonrise over the beach one night on the road.


I got into the tropical fruit spirit with mango ice cream made from mangoes grown in the orchard surrounding the ice cream stand.


And eventually we crossed into the "Wet Tropics" of northern Queensland, a World Heritage Area due to its natural beauty and exceptional biodiversity, among other things. This means that we're now in the territory of the highly endangered southern cassowary, a bird roughly similar to an emu (and designated "southern" because its northern cousins inhabit Papua New Guinea).


Check out the birds sitting atop the cows. This is just funny to me, so I thought I'd share.


Something maybe a little more share-worthy: spectacular Wallaman Falls, the highest single-drop, continuous (through the entire year) waterfall in Australia, and TOTALLY worth detouring an hour inland to check it out.
 

One of the many things I've been learning about Australia, and Queensland in particular, is that there is a LOT of sugarcane here. I didn't think of Australia as a place that grows sugarcane, and I didn't recognize this as sugarcane, because it looks so different from the sugarcane that grew in Madagascar. But that's what this is--fields and fields and more sweeping fields of sugarcane so ripe for harvest that it has these lovely flowering tops.


Even in the intermittent rain and under the cloudy skies, there was great beach-walking nearly every step of the way north, and the landscape getting more and more dramatically gorgeous. Coastal Queensland is BEAUTIFUL.



1 comment:

  1. I love that you take pictures of the animal crossing signs.

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