Welcome to Cooktown
From Historical Cooktown to the tip of Australia
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Cairns Older Car Hire

Free Car Hire!

Hire any vehicle for 6 days and we'll give you a 7th ABSOLUTELY FREE!Cairns Older Car Hire will reduce your rate if... more

Valid to the: 31 Mar 2010

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Busy Bees Babysitting

If you are looking to find a babysitter or find a nanny in Tropical North Queens... more


Trinity Waters Boutique Beachfront Holiday Apartments

Your tropical paradise holiday starts right here; 12 Boutique Beachfro... more


Calypso Campervan Rentals

Travelling in a Calypso Campervans is a great way to see Australia.You can trave... more


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1 Day Cooktown 4WD Adventure
Cooktown and Guurrbi Tours
Posted: Saturday, 27 Feb 2010
The Weekend Australian has featured Cooktown and Guurrbi Tours, Saturday 26th February 2010  The Bama Way Discovery Tour combines three Aboriginal tours into a unique three day journey. Small gro...


1 Day Cooktown 4WD Adventure
Things to see and do in Cooktown
Posted: Tuesday, 25 Nov 2008
There is so much to see and do in Cooktown! A wonderful untouched paradise where you can immerse yourself in this small historic coastal town surrounded by stunning countryside. Fish with the locals d...


  • Featured Listings

3 Day Cape Tribulation & Cooktown Wanderer

The Wanderer is for the independent traveller who wants free time to explore and relax in Cape Tribulation and Cooktown.  You can hav free day(s) depending how long you want to stay amongst the rainforest or in historic Cooktown.  Accommodation and key highlights are included.

CairnsEvents.com

Lists all events in Cairns, Tablelands and Port Douglas in Arts & Culture, Business, Community, Festivals, Horse Racing, Kids, Markets, Music, Nightlife, Rodeos, Sport, Theatre and more!!!

Skysafari Australia

Experience the Reef, Outback & Rainforest from above.

Ahoy Plane-Sailing Seaplanes

Our aim at Ahoy Plane-Sailing Seaplanes is to provide our guests, both Australian and our international friends, with an informative and enjoyable look at one of the greatest wonders of the world.
  • About Cooktown

From Cooktown to the tip of Australia is some of the most spectacular and rugged scenery in the country and one of the world's last wilderness areas. The area is an under-explored paradise with thousands of species of tropical birds, beautiful waterfalls and basking crocodiles.

It’s also culturally significant to the continent’s settlement. For much of the past two million years, a land bridge connected Cape York Peninsula and Papua New Guinea. As a result, the forests and woodlands of Cape York contain strong genetic links to those of Papua New Guinea. This close connection has been manifested through the sharing of species such as riflebirds and the tree kangaroos. It has also created the peoples known as Torres Strait Islanders who, with the Injinoo Aboriginal people, populate most of the northern coastal reaches of the continent.

Unlike any comparable region in Australia, Cape York still retains a full complement of functioning ecosystems ranging from undisturbed coastal environments, through to wetlands, riverine forests, tropical woodlands, tropical rainforests, dry rainforests, heathlands and dunefields. It is a priceless mosaic of life and diversity. It's numerous rivers run free and wild, unregulated by dams and weirs. During the 'wet' these rivers become enormous, creating seemingly endless floodplains that fertilise and revitalise the country.

The Cape York Peninsula begins north of Cairns, extending almost 1000 kms to the geographical tip of Australia in the north. It covers about 137,000 square kilometres -the Coral Sea is to the east of the Peninsula, the Torres Strait to the north, and the Gulf of Carpentaria to the west.

The long history of Aboriginal occupation has left a legacy of some of the world's great archaeological treasures, with some sites dating back at least 30,000 years. The sandstone escarpments of Quinkan country contain thousands of rock art sites in what is probably the largest and oldest collection of rock art in the world.

Cape York Peninsula was the first part of Australia to be mentioned in written history. After recorded visits in the 1600s by Dutch and Spanish explorers, in 1770 Captain James Cook proclaimed British sovereignty by raising the flag on Possession Island. These days, exploration takes many forms.

Cape York’s accessibility has meant limited facilities and relatively few inhabitants. From around Cooktown north, access is by dirt road suitable for 4WD, air via commercial flights into Cooktown, Weipa, Bamaga or Horn Island in the Torres Straits or by private charter or airstrip, or along the coast by sea. The eastern edge is rainforest, but west of the Great Dividing Range the land is mainly eucalypt woodland, scrubland and grasslands. The numerous rivers vary from almost dry in the dry season (May-November) to overflowing in the wet season (December-April), when the road to the Cape becomes impassable.

Safari tour companies offer various Cape trips, starting from Cairns or Cooktown. Vehicles range from Toyota Landcruisers to 14 seat Australian made 4WD OKAs; and guests have the option of a full camping safari or an accommodated safari with overnights at motels, resorts or cabins. Some of the vehicles (catering for backpackers) will drop passengers off along the way and collect again a few days later, if desired. A motorcycle safari company based in Cairns also offers guided tours to and from the Tip, as it’s called. Tag along tours where people drive their own 4WDs with a group leader are a popular option.

For anyone planning to travel on their own outside a guided safari, they’ll need to be fully prepared with maps, a suitable 4WD vehicle, emergency supplies, and a couple of good guide books.

 

 

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