21 March 2011
Fraser Island
I booked on a 4wd tour of Fraser Island which left from Hervey Bay. The idea of these tours is that you are put into small groups, given a 4wd land cruiser and then drive around Fraser island for 3 days, 2 nights following a lead car so that you don't get lost or caught out by the tides.
Fraser Island is a 30 minute ferry ride from shore and is the largest sand island in the world and what makes it cool is that it's covered with rainforest and it's inaccessible without a 4wd. The aboriginals call it K'gari which means Paradise.
We spent our first day swimming in Lake Mackenzie which was amazing. The lake was huge and the waters crystal clear. We also swam in Eli Creek and drove down long empty beaches. The sea looked really nice but you can't swim in it as it's shark infested and full of nasty jelly fish. Our camp was already set up for us- very basic tent, toilets and showers with some very scary spiders that I'm slowly getting used to. Dingos also roamed through camp which was really cool. The wild dogs however can attack if they feel threated and we were told just to stand still if they approached us. This training came in good use when a toilet trip saw a few of us between a dingo and a rubbish bin food source!
More swimming on the second day and we were having the best weather I've seen in Australia. We swam in the Champagne pools which are large rocks pools that the waves fill making the water bubbly. We walked to the top of Indian Head which is an aboriginal massacre sights which gave us amazing coastal view and we also swam in Lake Wabby which is at the foot of a huge sand dune.
As we were due to catch a lunch time ferry back to the mainland we had limited time on the third day but we still managed to fit in a swim in Lake Birebeen and a trip to see the Maheno ship wreck which lies on the beach shore. The rusty wreck was once a passenger liner which sank in a cyclone whilst being towed to a Japanese scrap yard. It was pretty cool to see the waves crashing through the empty shell. We also saw a much hated Cane toad in camp that morning. It was absolutely massive!
Fraser Island has been a brilliant trip and it's amazing how much fun you can have when you give people a bit of sand, plenty of swimming opportunities and a campsite. Although there were 30 people in all the cars you only really mix with the people you share a car with as you spend 24/7 with them. Thankfully I had a great group- a mix of English, Swiss and Brazilian and we had a fab time and it was sad to leave them as I headed next to Bundaberg.
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