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The last 800m to one of Australia's most historic spots is the toughest part of the trek

The last 800m to one of Australia's most historic spots is the toughest part of the trek

This story is part of the June 8 edition of Sunday Life. See all 14 stories.
The final 30-odd kilometres of unsealed road to Cape York are perhaps its roughest. Starting from Bamaga, one of five Indigenous communities strung out across the Northern Peninsula Area, a single-lane track plagued with potholes and bulldust cuts through tangled rainforests inhabited by one of the last remaining cassowary populations in Queensland.
The turn-back point for the less determined is at The Croc Tent, a roadside souvenir store stocking anything and everything related to the region, including crocodile snow domes and 'Snappers', a kind of male g-string that comes in one size only: XXL. Especially popular are garish, fishing-themed polo shirts that have been adopted as an unofficial uniform in this isolated part of the world.
Following a tricky creek crossing further along the track, motorists travelling almost exclusively in four-wheel-drives must pass the decaying remains of the Cape York Wilderness Lodge, which closed for renovations in 2002 and never reopened. From there, the end of the road is in sight.
Our final stop is a gravel clearing beside the sweeping sands of Frangipani Bay, just 800 metres from continental Australia's northernmost tip. It has taken our Outback Spirit tour group nine days to reach this point after starting our journey in Cairns, more than 1000 kilometres south. But from here, we must continue on foot.
To make it this far, we'd travelled up the coast to Cooktown before turning inland across the Great Dividing Range. After departing the dripping wet Daintree rainforests, the remainder of our journey traversed savannah woodlands bordered by sandstone escarpments and crocodile-infested wetlands. While we were able to ride out the bumps and corrugations in the comfort of our rugged coach, thoughts were spared for those who preceded us.
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The first European overland attempt to reach Cape York, an area inhabited by Indigenous people for tens of thousands of years, was led by Englishman Edmund Kennedy. Kennedy's 13-strong expedition party left Rockingham Bay in 1848, aiming to establish a route to the tip so that a port could be developed for trade with the East Indies. All but three of the group perished and the expedition failed.
A further 17 years passed before two brothers, Frank and Alexander Jardine, made it all the way to the tip, opening a corridor for a telegraph line that would connect Laura, west of Cooktown, with Thursday Island, in the Torres Strait. After four years of toil and hardship, it was completed in 1887.
In 1928, two New Zealanders followed the telegraph line to reach the cape in an Austin 7 car. It took them 38 days, with quicksand, forest fires and an average of 25 punctures a day slowing them down. At night, the two slept in the open on a bed of gum leaves, wrapped inside a mosquito net.
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White House lands on Trump-Putin summit location as officials race to prepare for historic Alaska meeting
White House lands on Trump-Putin summit location as officials race to prepare for historic Alaska meeting

9 News

timean hour ago

  • 9 News

White House lands on Trump-Putin summit location as officials race to prepare for historic Alaska meeting

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Cheers to Pinot Noir Day
Cheers to Pinot Noir Day

West Australian

time10 hours ago

  • West Australian

Cheers to Pinot Noir Day

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European cities slap hefty fees on tourists - here's what it'll cost if you're caught wearing flip-flops
European cities slap hefty fees on tourists - here's what it'll cost if you're caught wearing flip-flops

Sky News AU

time2 days ago

  • Sky News AU

European cities slap hefty fees on tourists - here's what it'll cost if you're caught wearing flip-flops

If you're vacationing in Europe this summer, better bring along extra cash. Popular tourist destinations in European cities are combating mass tourism by slapping some ridiculous, costly fines — some rising into the thousands — on visitors they deem unruly. Wearing flip-flops while driving, taking a shell or pebble from a beach and unbuckling your seatbelt before the plane stops taxiing can now cost you. Those who wear a bathing suit off the beach in the cities of Barcelona, Albufeira, Split, Sorrento, Cannes and Venice could face fines of up to $1,747, according to the BBC. In Mallorca, Ibiza, Magaluf and the Canary Islands, drinking alcohol on the street can set tourists back $3,495, and in Spain, leaving your towel to hold your pool chair for too long can cost $291. Spain, Greece, Italy, France and Portugal are the countries cracking down on those sporting flip-flops behind the wheel — and doling out $349 tickets for the crime. Greece is punishing those who make off with a shell or pebble by making them shell out $1,165 — and if you swim in a canal in Venice, be prepared to cough up $407. 'Locals are fed up,' tourism advocate Birgitta Spee-König told the outlet. 'These fines are signals that communities want to reclaim space. It's not that tourists are worse — it's more that the tolerance has gone. And it's important to consider that not every fine is a crackdown: Some are calls for respect.' Cities are even going so far as to launch marketing campaigns that outline what's against the law. A brand new 10-point Improve Your Stay campaign was introduced on buses and billboards in Malaga, Spain. Its signage details what the area expects of its guests — that they dress in a tasteful manner and avoid littering, making excessive noise and riding scooters recklessly, or risk an $873 fine. Albufeira also plastered signs in public spaces, explaining the fines for things tourists cannot do in public, like perform sexual acts, urinate, cook or even camp. Authorities are defending the stringent rules — which are being implemented by patrolling police — by saying they were set to protect locals, as well as respectful tourists who want to enjoy their vacation. 'The rules, while they might sound rigid and punitive when listed out, are all about encouraging responsible and empathetic traveling,' Jessica Harvey Taylor, head of press at the Spanish Tourism Office in London, told BBC. 'They are designed to protect the holiday experiences of the vast majority of people who behave responsibly on holiday.' Juan Antonio Amengual, mayor of Calvià, Mallorca, echoed the sentiment in a speech earlier this year. 'We must act with two main ideas in mind: the protection and preservation of the environment; and ensuring that tourism is in harmony with our society. 'Tourism cannot be a burden on citizens.' Originally published as European cities slap hefty fees on tourists - here's what it'll cost if you're caught wearing flip-flops

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