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Nudey Beach
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Fitzroy Island
Little known but attractive island with excellent bushwalking
Fitzroy Island is a large continental island (ie.
it was once part of the mainland and the area between the island and
the coast was drowned after the last Ice age - 6,000 years ago). Today
it has a small area given over to a resort. The vast majority of the
island is a National Park .
The island is of great spiritual significance to the
Gunghandji Aboriginal people who live on the mainland. They believe
that during the Dreamtime a person named Gulnyjarubay came to the area
and named the island Gabara meaning 'the fist'. It was a way of saying
that the arm and the wrist had been submerged and all that was left was
'the fist' standing up out of the water.
The Gunghandji Aboriginal people have used Fitzroy
Island for thousands of years as place for hunting and fishing. Today
they still have an active involvement with the island.
In 1770 Captain Cook became the first European to
sight Fitzroy Island. He named the island after the Duke of Grafton who
was the Prime Minister when the Endeavour left England on its epic
voyage through the Pacific.
Throughout the nineteenth century the island was visited by
itinerants. By the late 1800s a beche de mer (sea cucumber) industry
was operating on the island. It was also around this time (1876) that
the island became a quarantine station for the Chinese who arrived in
north Queensland eager to try their luck on the goldfields around the
Palmer River.
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The modern lighthouse at the
top of the island
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By the early 1900s
there was an Anglican Aboriginal Mission at Yarrabah and by 1929, after
a number of shipwrecks, the first lighthouse was built. It was little
more than a navigation light and was established on Little Fitzroy only
to be replaced by a more substantial lighthouse on the main island in
1943. The current lighthouse, a far cry from the solidity of the great
19th century edifices, was built in 1970 and continued to operate until
1991 when an automatic system was established.
Things to see:
Vital Information About the Island
1. The Island Itself
Location
25 km south east of Cairns.
Description of the island
A substantial island (339 hectares) which has been
largely ignored by visitors to Cairns because of the more attractive
options of Green Island (a coral cay) and Outer Reef journeys to reef
platforms. It has a lot to offer and is sufficiently large and close to
the mainland to have diverse vegetation and fauna.
How do visitors access it?
Great Adventures, which operate from Cairns harbour,
offer regular trips to the island. The cost (1/9/98) was $30.
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The view from the lighthouse
- looking across to the mainland
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Activities on
the island
Excellent bushwalking particularly to the lighthouse.
Both swimming and snorkelling are available around the coast. There are
four main walking trails on the island. (a) the secret garden - a
pleasant 45 minute walk (return) through rainforest (b) Nudey Beach - a
pleasant and easy walk to a quiet and peaceful beach through rainforest
and coastal bush - 1.2 km - 45 minutes return (c) Lighthouse road -
frighteningly steep road (it is concreted all the way) up to the
island's modern lighthouse (built 1970). It is 3.6 km return (2 hours)
but the views are spectacular and worth the effort (d) Summit trail -
just below the lighthouse is the 1.5 km return walk to the summit. It
offers even more spectacular views but is also very steep. Really for
fit bushwalkers rather than day trippers.
2. Resorts on the Island
History
The current resort is owned by
Daikyo, a Japanese property investment company who also own Great
Adventures, the resort on Green Island and a number of hotels in Cairns.
How big is it?
40 rooms capable of holding around 150 people
Who does it appeal to?
Daytrippers from Cairns as well as people who want an
economic, budget holiday.
Free activities
Bushwalking, non-motorised water sports, swimming and sunbathing.
Other activities
Diving, catamarans, Outer Reef trips.
Eating at the resort
A range of eating is available from the Fitzroy Island
Kiosk (sandwiches, burgers, ice creams) to the Flare Grill (meats and
seafoods grilled) and the Rainforest Restaurant which is open for
breakfast and dinner.
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Resorts
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Fitzroy Island Resort
P.O. Box 2120
Cairns
Fitzroy Island
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 9588, 1800 079 080
Facsimile: (07) 4052 1335
Rating: ***
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