Top End Australia - HoneyTrek.com-7780

Why come to Australia? If we had to choose one reason, we’d say The Outback. Sure, this country has gorgeous beaches, ancient forests, world-class cities, but this wild landscape and its cultural identity is so uniquely Australian, it can’t be found anywhere else in the world. The Outback by definition is the vast, remote, rugged, and the largely impassable interior of the country. When we asked a local about bus options between Daintree and Darwin, they literally laughed in our face. “Nothing but the ‘road-trains’ do that route and, trust us, you don’t want to try.” There would be no leisurely self-guided road trip through the Outback, we had to pick one section and call in the pros. We flew from Cairns to Darwin, the capital of the “Top End” and joined Adventure Tour‘s 3-Day Kakadu and Katherine Safari to explore this UNESCO Heritage area with its unreal landscapes and oldest living culture in the world.

wallabees australia

As soon as we left Darwin with our small group tour (as in one other guest and our awesome guide Luke) the wildlife sightings began. We even saw wallabees while filling up at the gas station, they are everywhere!

mary river australia

The Top End Outback is actually not as arid as you’d think, it’s monsoonal with tropical qualities since it is so close to the equator and the coast. We arrived to Mary River National Park and it was covered with lotus flowers, surrounded by waddle trees and exotic birds. The area is particularly known for its bird watching and abundance of water pythons (over 800 of them were found in 1sq kilometer. “No Swimming Allowed” is an understatement).

kakadu national park

We stopped for lunch and took a boat up the Crocodile River, the border of Arnhem Land. This eastern section of the Top End is all Aboriginal territory and virtually closed to independent travelers. We cruised upstream escorted by our Wulna guide, learning about the aboriginal traditions, including how to throw a spear wicked far.

adventure tours australia camp

Adventure Tours has their own fixed private camps set up around the national parks, including a dining tent with full kitchen, proper bathrooms, and these lovely little screened-in cabins (not sure if these would keep the pythons or crocs out, but the mesh at least made us feel better).

kakadu termite mounds

The next morning we set out for Kakadu National Park, stopping for water monitors, Rock-wallabies, and any other wonders our eagle-eye guide Luke would spot. A favorite detour was this 50-year old and 15-foot tall Cathedral Termite Mound. The construction of these natural skyscrapers with their walls of mud, plant, saliva, and feces is mind-boggling. The fact that they stand so tall and strong is largely from the brilliance of the complex social society of the termite dividing labor among the worker, solider, and reproducing mites to keep their world in check.

aboriginal rock art collage

Kakadu and its surrounds has crazy landscapes but when you get to Ubirr and soak in the ancient cave art, dating back 40,000 BC (yes, THAT old) you can see why UNESCO groupies swoon here. The aboriginal people of Kakadu are the oldest living culture on earth and while these paintings date back an unfathomably long time, they are actually regularly being added to and updated by the local people who value importance of this art as their archives. The aboriginal languages were never written, so their sacred texts of creation, law, and values are recorded on walls like these. We marveled at the rock art, then climbed the sandstone cliff shelters for incredible sunset views of the Nardab floodplain.

It’s hard to capture the expansive beauty and cultural significance of Kakadu so we’re going to let this helicopter view and bad-ass aboriginal leader, do the rest of the talking. Stay tuned for more from our 4×4 trip across the Northern Territory. Next up: Katherine Gorge to Darwin.

Kakadu Travel Blog Slideshow

Note: Adventure Tours invited us to be their guests but all opinions expressed are completely our own.
 

7 Comments

  1. Anna Kate says:

    I am always blown away by your photos, I love the first one! I hope to do this some day!

    1. Aww thanks Anna Kate! That first photo was of our Outback guide. He was so awesomely Aussie and it was too perfect with that hat and the sunset. You’ll love Kakadu, go!

  2. Travel With Bender says:

    Why have I never been here? It’s funny how we “still call Australia home” without having seen most of it. Thanks for convincing me I should head home 😀

    1. Fair enough, Australia is huge!!! Definitely check out this swath of the Top End and enjoy!

  3. Megan Claire says:

    The camp looks amazing, we would love to get out into the tropics of the Northern Territory and explore!! Moving home to Australia in July and really looking forward to getting up to NT 🙂

  4. Wow this very nice article.

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