Our Easter break was supposed to be spent in the Whitsunday
Islands at the Great Barrier Reef; however, cyclone Debbie visited the area 2
weeks before us and the islands were still not ready (no power and services)
when we were scheduled to leave. We tried to reschedule but the available dates
were not working well with our calendar. The Whitsundays are a popular
destination with many resorts and amenities. We did some research and decided
to visit Great Keppel Island in the Keppel Islands National Park on the very
south end of the Great Barrier Reef instead. Like Whitsundays, the Keppel
Islands had protected coves where we could wade out to coral reef. Being on the
south end of the Great Barrier Reef the ocean would be a little cooler but this
meant no stingers (jelly-fish) or crocodiles! Unlike the Whitsundays, the
Keppel Islands do not have much development. Great Keppel Island is the only
island in the National Park to have accommodations other than camping. There
are no real roads (and the only vehicles are 4x4 sand buggies and utes). The island also only has two restaurants (one pizza place open for dinners on weekends or
when the owner feels like opening) and NO grocery or convenience stores. This
meant we had to pack in most of our food. We spent eight days in the Keppels
and ate out 3 dinners. We packed in 70 lbs of boxed & tinned (canned) food
in our luggage including 7 litres of boxed milk, about 20 lbs of cold food in an
esky (cooler) carry-on (meat, cheese, and produce), and bags of apples and
carrots in our backpacks.
Pantry in a suitcase:
I was most worried about having enough bread and milk but
everything worked out fine.
Being less developed meant the island was also more difficult
to get to. We had a 12-hour travel day to get there: drive to Melbourne (3
hours), fly to Brisbane (2.5 hrs), fly to Rockhampton (1 hr), taxi to coast (45
min), ferry ride (45 min) to Great Keppel. But when we stepped off the ferry we
knew it was all worth it.
We stayed in a beach house on Fisherman beach. This is the
main “developed” beach on the island where most of the accommodations are
located. Even then, we often had the beach to ourselves.
Our beach house “The Keppel House:”
View of the “road” from our house to the beach just beyond
the trees (and a boy washing sand off his bum):
Walking Fisherman beach. Our house is located in the trees to
the far right of the picture:
The location made for really impressive sunsets. We would oo
and ah while eating dinner and jump up to take a picture before the moment
ended:
We probably could have been content just playing at
Fisherman all week. The house was stocked with beach toys and a stand-up paddle
board that provided hours of entertainment. We usually would see a sea turtle
while we were paddling around the cove and Eric believes he and Cady saw a
dugong (look it up!).
Cady could control the paddle board fairly well on her own (can you see her?):
Asher and Maren enjoyed riding while an adult paddled:
We collected amazing shells, built countless sand castles,
dug heaps of holes and created a few sand creatures:
We also caught and watched hermit crabs and other shell life
as they burrowed into the sand:
Great Keppel boasts 17 impressive white sand beaches with
clear blue waters and so we tried out a few others. The other 16 were all a bit
of a hike to get to. Long beach was less protected with bigger waves (and we
heard stories of sharks just off the beach). But it had an aboriginal midden dating back 500+ years.
Luckily the only big shark we saw was this one:
Putney beach had really fine sand and long stretches of
shallow water. Putney beach fun:
Shelving beach and Monkey beach were where the snorkeling
action was. Both had coral reef just off of the beach but both required hiking
over a small mountain to get to. Our first effort to reach Monkey beach included
a missed turn that resulted in our bushwalk turning to a bushwack as we made
our way down a drainage gully to find the beach and added 1 hour onto a 40
minute hike.
Making our way down the steep drainage:
We would often hear or see wild goats when we hiked the
interior of the island. The first Europeans to the island kept goats here and
they have done quite well on their own.
Billy goat gruff:
The older kids were really nervous with the first few
attempts at snorkeling – Asher wouldn’t even put his head in the water. So we
decided to take a ride on a glass-bottom boat over the coral to show the kids a
little of what they could see and get them more interested. We saw a turtle,
sting ray, beautiful fish and colorful coral. When we got back to the house
that evening Asher started drawing all of the sea animals he saw and both he
and Cady talked about the reef non-stop. It worked – they were excited to see
more. (I’ll write a separate post about the reef – so much to say!)
Watching the coral beneath the glass-bottomed boat:
The boat also docked at the edge of the reef and provided
buckets of small (dead) fish that we could hand-feed to the large reef fish.
This attracted a lot of batfish and large blue “Dory” fish as well as a wrasse
and coral trout. One of the batfish mistook Cady’s finger for food and left her
bleeding L
but she took it like a champ.
Fish ready for food (or fingers!):
On our final day we took a water taxi to a small,
uninhabited island: Middle Island. We had the entire place to ourselves. At the
end of the day when we were leaving – we commented on how many footprints were
all over the beach and that every single one of them was from us! It was a happy
realization of how much we had done and enjoyed. The surf at Middle Island was
much bigger and more aggressive than we had experienced anywhere on Great
Keppel and the kids had a blast getting knocked over by waves. Even Maren would
go running head first into oncoming waves. The reef was accessible a little
ways off the beach but as the water was quite choppy, just the adults took
turns snorkeling.
Dropped off (stranded like Gilligan!) on Middle Island:
The beach was ours:
Happy family on Middle Island:
On the boat ride back the driver spotted a dolphin mum and
calf and followed them. The dolphins were soon playing at the bow of the boat.
The kids thought they could reach out and pet them! It was a great send-off – a
tender mercy as this was the only animal remaining on Asher’s (our sea life
enthusiast) list of creatures he wanted to see.
Looking for the dolphins at the bow of the boat:
We chartered a small plane to leave the island and take us
to the closest mainland airport. It was only a 20-minute flight but everyone
thought it was a highlight of the holiday.
Watching our plane land on the island’s tiny airstrip:
Eric relived his glory days as co-pilot (something he did often as a kid with his dad as pilot):
Goodbye Great Keppel Island! I hope we will see you again
one day!
As a post-note: I have to add that Great Keppel Island will
always have a piece of the Toman family. Cady lost a tooth and then dropped it
down the bathroom drain as she was trying to rinse it off. J
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