After busting our front wheel just off the Old Telegraph Track we ended up spending a full week in the campsite at Seisia. This turned out to be a blessing as I picked up a pretty nasty virus and wound up in bed for a few days.
The first thing we did when we finally got our car back was move. A week in the same campsite felt like a long time and we were desperate for a change of scenery. We didn’t move far, just 10 kilometres to a grassy, basic site called Alau Bay near Umagio community, where we could set up close enough to the shore to watch the sunset from our bed (to which I was still pretty attached).
Finally, finally…. the next day, we could drive to The Tip. We were pretty excited, even if the kids failed to see the momentousness of the occasion. “It’s the northernmost tip of mainland Australia kids!” “It’s a really long way from Brisbane!” “It’s taken Mum and Dad years to prepare for and cost thousands of dollars to get here!!”
There’s not much on the road to the tip, nor are there any facilities once you get there. But it’s a spectacular walk over the rocks with the sickle-shaped bay below and all the islands in the Torres Strait in the distance. It was blowing a gale, which at least cooled things down, even if we did have to chase a few hats. Halfway up, a woman passed her Aussie flag on to Edith who declared “this is the best trip ever”!
People make their mark on this significant point by contributing to the piles of rocks. I don’t know whether it’s lucky, but we made sure to make a wish anyway as we placed our stones.
When it came time for the “money shot” (see top) we didn’t dither – the tide was high, the wind pushing waves up over the rocks and all I could think was “freak wave” closely followed by “was that a crocodile?”. After retreating a safe distance, we cracked a beer to celebrate – never mind it was only 10am, we’d come a long way to get there (and it was mid-strength).
Having high-fived The Tip, we decided it was time to head south and set out to make it across the Jardine River before nightfall, stopping only to buy meat from Seisia Meatworks, stock up on veggies at Bamaga and admire this eerie plane wreck.
We’d been warned not to camp by the ferry (noisy with bright lights) and found the perfect antidote: a free camp spot called Crystal Waters, with an old log bridge and a waterhole just six kilometres or so down the road.
Back In Seisia, we had met a grumpy man who claimed that a trip to Cape York was “a bloody long way to drive to see a couple of waterfalls” and, while there’s some truth in that, Fruit Bat Falls (below) was definitely worth the distance. The water was cool and clear, the falls soothed sore muscles and the rocks deter the crocs… bliss!
From the falls, we had a long drive south ahead of us. We had a good idea of what we wanted to see and do on the way down but, of course, if there’s one thing you can count on when you’re travelling, it’s that not everything will go to plan,
Click here to read the final instalment in our Cape York series.
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