Kings Cascades

This was a particularly enjoyable part of the trip where we had the opportunity to sit on the end of the boat and slowly get carried under the cascade falls.
Very refreshing…
It was also the placeLæs mere
This was a particularly enjoyable part of the trip where we had the opportunity to sit on the end of the boat and slowly get carried under the cascade falls.
Very refreshing…
It was also the placeLæs mere
We had an opportunity to visit the bridge with Jeremy and understand some of the technology used to maintain the operation of the boat.
Auto pilot is a very useful part of modern cruising.
In 1820Læs mere
Gwion Gwion art
Work undertaken by amateur archaeologist Grahame Walsh, who began work there in 1977 and returned to record and locate new sites up until his death in 2007. The results of this workLæs mere
We had some fun in the estuaries catching mud crabs 🦀 for the evening dinner.
It was not uncommon for sharks or crocodiles to take the baits out of the pots.
Trip back from the rock art featured a sea snake that seemed to have been hit a propeller…
Small tiny bat that was hitchhiking on our boat.
We also had our first swimming hole experience…freshLæs mere
The DC3 crashed en route from Perth to Broome back in February 1942, after the disoriented pilot made an emergency landing in bad weather on a salt pan on the western side of Mungalalu TruscottLæs mere
The King George River is a perennial river located in the Kimberley region of Western Australia.
The headwaters of the river rise to the west of the Ashton Range and flow in a northerly directionLæs mere
We arrived at the town of Wyndham to board our boat for the next two weeks.
The boat had been a tour boat in the Whitsundays for ten years and then moved up to the Kimberley coast.
As you can tellLæs mere
As a part of the cruise we had a short stop and had afternoon tea which consisted of scones jam and cream and some other tasty snacks.
Great day and a beautiful ecosystem that has actually benefitedLæs mere