Sugar cane harvesting.
You can't swim from the the beaches or the rivers because of the crocs.
A male cassowary and chick!
The beautiful ancient rainforest apparently the oldest on earth.
A mud skipper. One of the first creatures to venture out of the water onto the land.
The fruit of the tree that is poisonous but the cassowary eats it whole and passes the seed thus propagating the plant.
The ferry across the Daintree River.
Daintree village main drag.
Sunday
June 26th
I
woke up early and after breakfast decided to drive north to Daintree
National Park and visit Mossman Gorge which everyone at school had
told me to see. The first part of the road was through sugar cane
fields and past the mountains. Since it was drizzling a little bit
when I got to the gorge I decided to leave it until the end of the
day.
A
little further along the road I came to the Daintree River Ferry
Crossing which was a barge pulled across the river by cables. It
carried about fifteen vehicles across the croc infested river. The
road on the other side is narrow and winds through the rainforest
reputed to be the oldest on earth. This is where the rainforest comes
right down to the ocean and parts of it are actually growing on sand.
I turned off and took the even smaller road past the Daintree
Discovery Centre to go to Jindalba National Park further along the
road. As I turned a corner I found a cassowary crossing the road!
This is a 6ft tall flightless bird with a blue head. I stopped on the
road and watched as it stopped and turned and looked back. I had
separated the bird from a large chick which was hestitant to cross
because of my car. The adult made a couple of sounds and the chick
crossed in front of me and they stood there for a minute looking at
me and then disappeared into the forest. Very cool!
At
the end of this road was the Jindalba Boardwalk through the
rainforest. I always feel honoured and awed to be in one of my
favourite places, the rainforest, enjoying the majesty of the trees,
the quiet and the heavy damp moisture ladden air.
I
drove back to the Daintree Information Centre and paid the entrance
fee to take a walk through another part of the forest on a raised
canopy walk and climb a tower to see the forest from above. They also
had a very interesting interpretive centre where I learned that
female cassowaries are larger than males and do nothing regarding
parenthood other than laying the eggs. The male incubates them and
then rears the chicks for about a year. The cassowaries are ancient
birds which are vital for the rainforest. They eat forest fruits
whole (including poisonous ones) and disperse the seeds in their
droppings thus planting new trees. Some of the trees are dependent
on this process and scientists have discovered that a seed passing
through the bird has a 95 percent chance of germinating but only 5
percent if it doesn't. Reading all the information I was once more
reminded not to touch or pick up anything in Australia. There is a
plant that has silicon hair around the edge of its leaves which
release a burning irritant which causes a severe itching that lasts
for months!
After
leaving the centre I continued the drive to Cape Tribulation and the
Kulki Lookout where I photographed the view and walked along the
beautiful beach. There are nice sandy beaches along parts of the
road, but they all have signs warning you not to go in the water or
near the edge because of the crocs (salties and freshwater ones) and in the summer
'stingers' which are deadly fingernail size jellyfish. Their stings can cause an agonizing death apparently. I have heard a couple of
people talk about a woman who was taken by a croc a couple of weeks ago on
one of these beaches as she was standing knee deep in the water! You
have to wonder why anyone lives up here.
I
drove a few kilometres north until the pavement ended. My rental car
agreement says I cannot take the car off road on the unpaved roads up
here so I turned back. The road continues to Cooktown but is not
suitable for anything but a four wheel drive vehicle.
On
the way back I took another walk through the forest on a different trail
called the Narrdja boardwalk and delighted in the smells of wet earth
and salt air. I stopped at a restaurant along the way that sold
burgers of croc, roo, emu, wild boar, camel and buffalo. I had a
sampler plate of the first three, which was very good.
After
taking the return ferry I drove to Daintree Village and had a look
around. It is a very small village with not much to offer except a
couple small places to stay.
On
the way home I stopped at Mossman Gorge but it was too late to do the
trek so I got some information for tomorrow and drove back to the
hotel (and my two bedroom apartment) for the evening.
Happy Canada Day Joe
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