Cooktown

Cooktown was 2 days of rest and relaxation at the Cooktown caravan park on the outskirts of Cooktown. I did do about 30km riding in and around Cooktown.

Ayton to Cooktown

67km.  I really felt tired but I was determined to get to Cooktown and have two days of rest. The owners of the Caravan Park told me I had a range to ride over, so I was prepared.

I set off early, had the road mostly to myself. It was so lush, with high green grass right up to the edge of the road, didn’t leave me anywhere to pull over for a rest. I did a few pushes up the hills, but not many really. I sort of surprised myself that I managed to keep going even though I was so tired and sore from the Bloomfield track.

I passed yet another crashed car.

 

The I rode past Black Mountain, which is definitely a strange looking mountain.

Black Mountain, an eroded magma mountain

A few more kms, including a hill just before Cooktown, and I arrived at Cooktown carvan park at 5pm. As had happened several times so far the sign outside said full. However I went to the office and told them my tent was very small and they found me a spot. I then put up my tent, and headed into town and got myself a hamburger with the lot, my reward for a long day, with 6 hours riding at an average speed of 11.5km per hour.

 

 

Bloomfield Track

35km. The hardest day yet. I got going from my stealth campsite at 8:30am. About 2 kms later I hit the first hill. This was the hill with road works. They were concreting the hill and had traffic lights set up. The road workers were very encouraging as I dragged and pushed my bike up the hill.

The first steep hill. I thought this was the worst one but I was wrong, more hills were to come.

It was up and down with a fair bit of traffic, until I got to the next hill which was the killer hill. 31% grade, although it was concreted. It took me an hour to push up the hill 10m at a time.

About 3/4 of the way up the hill I stopped next to an abandoned Pajero, that must have broken down trying to get up the hill. It had been there for a least 6 months.

Abandoned broken down Pajero

That was the worse hill over, but there were many shorter ones that I had to push up. Then I had to be careful on the decent, because my rims would overheat, and I could blow the innertube. I had already lost one innertube on a decent already.

One of the many creek crossings along the Bloomfield track

Eventually I got to the end of the Bloomfield track and reached Wujal Wujal. I detoured to the shop but it was closed. I was so tired but I was determined to reach the campground at Ayton, which I did at 5pm. It was a long exhausting day. 

 

 

Daintree National Park to Bloomfield Track

30km. I left again early at 8am, with not much traffic on the road. It was about 10km until I got internet access back that I had lost the previous day. I stopped at Thornton Beach. Then it was a slog up Noah Range. Over the range I met a German cyclist who had ridden from Melbourne to Cape Tribulation. His bicycle was getting pretty worn out, he needed a new cassette and chain after 8,000km, so he was heading to Cairns for an overhaul. I find it interesting that there is this trend to super lightweight bikepacking, yet when I meet on the road people who have been bicycle touring for long periods they carry heaps of stuff. This guy had collected things from the side of the road, including straps and a gold ball. Certainly not lightweight.

It was then onto a park south of Cape Tribulation where I stopped for lunch. Then after lunch I rode past a mini supermarket which was a bonus. I could top up food supplies, because I was really unsure how long it would take me to get to Cooktown.

I did the touristy thing and walked to the lookout at Cape Tribulation, and then along Cape Tribulation beach. Then it was a push up the road out of the carpark and on the road to the Bloomfield track.

Looking back towards Cape Tribulation

I was surprised how many cars and 4wds were driving along the road to the Bloomfield track. The Bloomfield track started with the warning sign advising against taking trailers, yet every second 4wd that was passing me had a trailer.

Warning sign at the start of the Bloomfield track

I passed another cyclist on the Bloomfield who was riding along on his mountain bike. He gave me a couple of possible steath camping sites along the Bloomfield. I eventually got to Emmogen Creek and probably the deepest water crossing on the track. This is where the cars were driving to, as people were swimming at the waterhole.

I pushed on another few kms until I got to the suggested stealth camping site, where I pulled into a little track of the Bloomfield, put up my tent next to a long abandoned car, and covered it with my stealth green tarp to hide it in the rainforest. I felt guilty stopping early at only 3pm, but again I was pretty tired.

the long abandoned car I put my tent next to

 

 

Daintree Village to Daintree National Park

33km. I decided against the Creb Track. The lady who ran the campground said it needed several days of sunny weather to be passable, and it had rained every night for the last 4 nights.

So I headed off at 8:00am in the still morning air backtracking the 10km to the ferry turnoff.

I crossed the ferry, charged $3 (cars were $25), being told by the ticket booth attendant that someone had come through from Thursday Island by bicycle. I When leaving the ferry, one of the workers told me to be careful as there were lots of blind corners.

Riding along the road towards the Daintree National Park

This turned out to be good advice, as the climb up to the lookout was narrow and windy and steep. I spent a lot of time either pushing the bike or hiding as far to the side of the road as I could.

I stopped at the top of the range at the lookout with the the rest of the tourists. Them down the steep decent where I suffered the perennial problem I have with thornproof inner tubes, the rims overheaded and the valve stem broke off the tube. So it was find somewhere safe to pull over, and replace the tube.

At around 3pm, it was 18km to the next campsite, so I stopped at Rainforest Village on a $30 campsite.

Mossman to Daintree Village

40km. Left Mossman Caravan Park early at 8:00am because I was not allowed to use my wood stove to cook my Barley. I went to Woolies again south of town to get breakfast and 4 days of supplies to get me to Cooktown.

Left town, on a relatively busy road heading north. Stopped for a break at Wonga Beach.

I met a young woman walking with her rucksack south of the turnoff to the Daintree ferry, She was walking the Bicentennial trail. She had walked from its start in Victoria to the Queensland border, and now she was walking south. (total when she finishes will be 5,000km) She had walked from Cooktown via the creb track. Now I had thought of riding the creb track, but I thought it was closed. It took her 4 days, and it is really really steep and muddy. Also you need someone to give you a lift across the Daintree River, because of the crocs.
So I decided to miss the ferry and ride up to Daintree Village and try the creb track. However because the day was getting late, I decided to camp at Daintree Village campground where the owner has mostly convinced me its way too hard to ride the creb track.

So I am thinking about it. Here I am camped among the caravans and 4wds

Loading up supplies at Mossman Woolies
Camped among the 4wd and Caravans
At Wonga Beach 24C

Stopped at the park at Wonga Beach

Julatten Tablelands to Mossman

It rained during the night. That is why everything is so green here. 400m of altitude, but in the tropics. I packed up the wet tent and started of towards Mossman. I was intending to have a rest day at Mossman, so a 16km ride would have to count as a rest. I rode a couple of uphills and then there was a wonderful 8km decent. Caravans heading up and Caravans heading down. I eventually got to the main road which is the Captain Cook highway. The highway is much busier.

After 5km I arrived at Mossman. I stopped at the Woolies out of town and got some supplies. Then off to the Mossman caravan park. When I arrived at the gate the sign said no vacancies, but I went up to the office and asked if they could fit a small tent and bicycle, which they could (at a cost of $31). I then used the camp kitchen to charge all of my flat batteries. The rest of the day was rest

taking it easy in the Camp Kitchen at Mossman Caravan park

Kuranda National Park to Julatten Tablelands

39km. I got woken about 5am by multiple logging trucks heading along the road into the logging areas. At dawn I heard a truck stop near where I was camped (I couldn’t be seen from the road), and do something with chains. I panicked and thought that they were going to unload a bulldozer and start leveling the area where I was camped. I started a rush pack, but the truck left, I guess he was just checking his chains tying his load down.

I cooked breakfast and was on the road by 8:30am. I rode past areas where they were logging, but again after a few kms there was nothing but forest and me. I reentered Kuranda National Park, with the track becoming more windy and steep. It would climb and then drop down to a flowing creek and then rise again. I had only one car pass me in about 3 hours on this track. It has hard on the uphills because they were so steep I could not ride them, and had to push the loaded bicycle.

Eventually I left the national park and got to farmland and sugar cane plantations. Everything is so green and lush. The whole area is at 400m, so the weather is mild but also wet.

I was aiming to get to Mossman, but I passed a caravan park at the 9 mile out of Mossman which I thought was closed but it wasn’t. It was pretty full but I found a corner to camp in, and they only charged $10.

I had flat batteries on almost everything. I have a 40w solar panel on the back of the bike, but it has been so cloudy and the rainforest so dark, that nothing was getting charged.

Using the wood stove to cook breakfast
Riding through Kuranda National Park
Its lonely being a logger in the remote Kuranda Forest
Riding through the dark Kuranda Rainforest

 

 

 

Kuranda to Kuranda National Park

25km. I left Kuranda Caravan park late. I was so tired from the previous days ordeal. I rode 5km in to Kuranda Village and got supplies at the FoodWorks supermarket. I would have thought that Kuranda Village being so small it would have bicycles everywhere to get around. However no bicycles other than me, lots of 4wd utes.

I then headed back over the Barron River bridge and along Black Mountain road. It only took a few kms to get into Kuranda National Park. Initially there was a fair bit of traffic. 4wds, trail bikes and downhill bicycles. After a 10kms or so the traffic stopped and it was just me. The road wound up and down through thick rainforest, over flowing creeks, and then would open up into a logging area, before going back to rainforest. 

I was still tired from the previous day, so I stealth camped early at 3pm at the edge of the National Park in a logged out area.

Camped at Kuranda Caravan Park
The start of the National Park
Someone had a bad time on Black Mountain Road
Stealth camped at the edge of the Rain-forest in a logged out area

 

Cairns to Kuranda

37 km. 10th July 2021. I am following a GPS track that I found online that leads from Cairns to Cape York. It looked good, but the first part of the route was the 400m climb up to Kuranda on the Kuranda road. I thought this would be a better route than the coast road that I though would be so busy. I was so wrong.

The Kuranda road is horrible for bicycle riders. I walked half of the 12km up because it was to dangerous to ride because it was so narrow.  I definitely won’t be doing that road again. I should have seen if I could of got on the train, or anything else.

About 5pm I finally got to the caravan park at Kuranda, and pretty well collapsed asleep as soon as it got dark.

 

the bike in the box that it flew in from Adelaide to Cairns. I stayed at the Castaway backpackers in Cairns who were pretty friendly
Loaded up ready to leave Cairns
Stopped at the lookout on the horrible Kuranda Road