Australia: Infinity at Gunlom Falls

Relaxing in the infinity pool at the top of Gunlom Falls
Relaxing in the infinity pool at the top of Gunlom Falls

What is it about the Aussies where they feel the need to shorten names and then add an “O” to the end of them?

On my second day in Kakadu National Park I went on an excellent tour to Gunlom Falls.

My guide was called Damian. Or “Damo”. Everyone called him Damo. He called me Hayles instead of Hayley, which people sometimes do and I don’t mind at all. It seems like it’s an Aussie obsession to try and shorten a perfectly good name.

Me and my guide, Damo and fellow tourist, Val
Me and my guide, Damo and fellow tourist, Val

Anyway my day trip to the Gunlom Falls with Spirit of Kakadu was wonderful. I had a hire car, but there are so many car accidents in the Northern Territory involving tourists in hire cars that they have a lot of restrictions. One of them is that unless you have hired a 4WD, which is horrendously expensive in the Northern Territory, you can’t drive on any unsealed roads at all. Even if you hire a 4WD some roads are still off limits they’re so horrendous, including the one to Jim Jim Falls which even Kakadu Tours and Travel don’t offer because the roads are too horrendous for the guides to drive. Surely if the roads are so bad that even the local tour companies won’t go down them, they should do something to improve them.

I wasn’t going to Jim Jim, I was going to Gunlom, another place featured in Crocodile Dundee, at the very end of the Australian part of the film where they go swimming. The film is full of inaccuracies and downright lies, do not come to Kakadu relying on anything in that film. So for instance, Crocodile Dundee says that the lake at Gunlom Falls is safe to swim in because the crocs won’t go near mineral water. It’s total rubbish! In fact, the bottom pool at Gunlom is teeming with crocodiles. More about that later. 

Sign warning of the dangers of the Northern Territory’s most famous creatures
Sign warning of the dangers of the Northern Territory’s most famous creatures

Gunlom Falls was supposed to be amazing which was the reason I had opted to do a tour rather than miss it completely or spend hundreds of pounds hiring a 4WD to drive there myself. And I was not disappointed. If I’d been impressed with the tour yesterday, Gunlom Falls far surpassed it.

We made a brief stop at the termite mounds which were basically the same as I’d seen in Lichfield. Damo told me he hated guides who stuck keys and suchlike into the termite mounds to illustrate how termites repaired their mounds. If enough guides do that the termites can’t repair their mounds quickly enough, the ants get in and eat the termites. The other guide Tim then proceeded to do exactly that! Damo said they were ego tour guides who were the worst kind.

Giant termite mound in Kakadu National Park
Giant termite mound in Kakadu National Park

The road to Gunlom was horrible! Damo said I’d be pleased I hadn’t driven it myself and he was right. It was a rutted, corrugated, 37km nightmare. It was definitely as bad as some of the worst roads I’d driven on in South Australia. It was difficult to tell when I wasn’t driving if all 37km was completely ghastly, when he was flying over it at least 3 times as fast as I’d driven the really bad roads in South Australia, but 37km at 20kph would not have been fun.

Despite there being a total ban on hire cars going on gravel roads in the Northern Territory, there were plenty of tourists prepared to flout this rule and we passed a lot that were illegally driving down the road to Gunlom. The vehicles are fitted with trackers these days so the tourists would be caught out and if anything went wrong on the road they would be in big trouble. Damo said before the trackers were fitted, the car hire companies would give guides $50 for reporting any hire cars on the gravel roads. It must have been quite a good source of income! I certainly wasn’t prepared to take the risk of the return journey down this road in my hire car. It was quite nice to have a day off from driving too, particularly the sort of driving I would have had to do on this road! And the tour was immensely enjoyable.

The lower pool at Gunlom is teeming with crocodiles!
The lower pool at Gunlom is teeming with crocodiles!

So I mentioned that there are crocodiles in the lower pool at Gunlom Falls. Most of them are freshwater crocodiles which are small and generally harmless to humans. Freshwater crocodiles can only eat things they can swallow whole which means that eating a human is a physical impossibility as freshwater crocodiles are pretty small.

So you can happily swim amongst the crocodiles there as freshwater crocodiles will leave you alone unless you start throwing stones at them to make them move for photos which apparently people from Darwin tend to do!  The people of Darwin seem to have quite a bad reputation. They come into Kakadu from the city, throw stones at crocodiles and generally behave like idiots. They’re portrayed as a right load of hooligans.

The Darwin Times is apparently the Sunday Sport of Aussie newspapers. Damo said in any given week, 4 front page headlines would be about crocodiles, 2 would be about snakes and one about aliens!

If you look carefully you can see people at the top of Gunlom Falls
If you look carefully you can see people at the top of Gunlom Falls

While it’s safe to swim amongst the freshwater crocodiles in the lower pool at Gunlom, it has been known for the estuarine crocodiles, the infamous, man eating “salties”, to get into the pool at Gunlom Falls. Rangers check the water for them, but it’s not 100% guaranteed a man eating crocodile hasn’t got into the water.

It is 100% guaranteed that an estuarine crocodile has not got into one of the pools at the top of the falls because it would be impossible for a crocodile to get up there. It’s difficult enough for humans to get up there, so a crocodile would have no chance. It’s a long way up.

Damo was less accurate about was the path to the top of Gunlom Falls. He said the first two thirds was easy and the last third you’d be clambering over boulders as high as the bonnet of the car and if you had bad knees it was a bad idea. I really wanted to go to the top of the falls and swim in the infinity pool, but he made me nervous. I’d just about committed to staying at the bottom of the waterfall and braving the crocodiles, when me and Val, who was also on the tour, met an Aussie who said we really couldn’t miss the top of the waterfall and she’d done the hike in jandals (an Aussie word for flip flops). She said it was the best place in the park and we had to go up there. That convinced me and Val.

View from the top of Gunlom Falls
View from the top of Gunlom Falls

A new path is actually being constructed to the top of the falls, but it isn’t finished yet. It’s almost a shame that they’re constructing the easy path because it will make the top of the waterfall much more crowded for anyone who braves the horrible drive to Gunlom. And as it was, the path wasn’t that bad. I’ve done much harder hikes than that when I’ve been on my own. And for once I wasn’t the slowest person on the hike either. Val was much slower than me. She was older, but I’ve had people 20 years older than me bounding past me on some trails. Initially I was behind Val, but she was so slow I was scared I was going to get kicked in the face. I was much happier when I got in front of her and mostly managed to avoid ever being behind her on the hike again, both on the way up and on the way down.

Yes, there was a bit of clambering. But nothing insurmountable if you took your time and held on and there were plenty of rocks and trees to hold on to. I had to get down low to get down in some spots, my hands and clothes were filthy, but they’d both wash.

My view over Kakadu from my spot in the infinity pool at Gunlom Falls
My view over Kakadu from my spot in the infinity pool at Gunlom Falls

And I was so pleased I went up there. It was a definite highlight for me. The only problem was we didn’t have long enough. I could have stayed up there half the day. I got my bikini on, even if I did have a bit of a tummy on me at the moment. It was all I had with me and I was not missing out on a swim in the infinity pool.

The pool generally wasn’t too deep, it had quite a few rocks in it so I was half swimming and half walking to feel for the rocks so I didn’t bash my legs and then I got to the ledge of the infinity pool.

Someone sitting on the ledge below me which was far too slippery for me to walk out to!
Someone sitting on the ledge below me, which was far too slippery for me to walk out to!

There was actually one below me, but this was close enough and no one was swimming in the one below, although some people had walked out there. There was no way I could walk on those rocks. I would have slipped and fallen over the edge to certain death. I was happy. This was a good place to be.

In fact when the Austrian lad, who was in the other vehicle on the tour, took a photo of me with my camera, when you look at it, I look like I’m right on the edge of the waterfall, about to go over myself. It’s a great shot.

Swimmers in the infinity pool at the top of Gunlom Falls
Swimmers in the infinity pool at the top of Gunlom Falls

All too soon it was over and I had to get dried and dressed and tackle the path back down. My knee was pulling a bit, but this was not a really difficult hike and I was so pleased I’d listened to the Aussie woman in flip flops. She was right. This was the best place in the park. I was so pleased I had not missed out on going to the top of Gunlom Falls. They really should not be missed. They were the highlight of my trip to Kakadu and certainly one of the highlights of this trip to Oz.

Val didn’t agree with the Aussie lass in flip flops and it seemed to me that she wished she hadn’t gone up there especially as she had no swimming gear and wasn’t going to swim. She would have been better off staying down at the bottom and having a paddle in the shallow part of the lower pool.

Looking like a proper Aussie bush woman by the lower pool at Gunlom
Looking like a proper Aussie bush woman by the lower pool at Gunlom

I met a man on my way down from the falls who was obviously English, but lived in Texas. I had my Yorkshire teeshirt on and he asked what part of Yorkshire I was from.

We had lunch and then I ran off down the path to the pool at the bottom of the falls to take some photos with the top of the falls in them so that I could show where I’d been swimming. I asked an Aussie couple to take a photo of me. They said I looked like a proper Aussie bushwoman covered in dirt and asked if I was a Yorkshire lass. I said I certainly was. And I think I’m a very intrepid one at that. If it hadn’t been for the car restriction, I would have been coming to the Gunlom Falls by myself. No doubt about that.

Can you believe I was swimming right at the top of that waterfall?
Can you believe I was swimming right at the top of that waterfall?

And then it was time to head off. We went to the Moline Rockhole waterfall down a road that wasn’t signposted, but unfortunately a tour bus followed us so after about 10 minutes and we were inundated with people. The water at this pool was deeper than at the Gunlom Infinity pools and also I’d just about dried off, so I contented myself with dangling my legs in the water and didn’t bother swimming. A Brazilian girl from Rio in a very small Brazilian bikini was at the pool very happily swimming, but her French boyfriend contented himself with dangling his legs in the water too.

The arrival of the tour bus party completely ruined the tranquility, so it was time for us to move on. We did make a brief stop at a viewpoint at the side of the road for photos. Me and Val had a photo with Damo and I had a photo with Val and Anna who was also on the tour with us.

A peaceful, idyllic waterfall at Moline Rockhole - until the coach load turned up!
A peaceful, idyllic waterfall at Moline Rockhole – until the coach load turned up!

Then it was just heading back to the Lodge to pick up some cheese and wine and relax by the billabong just beyond the staff quarters at Cooinda Lodge. The billabong was a beautiful spot and there was plenty of wildlife to watch as we sipped our wine and ate our cheese and crackers.  There were cockatoos, eagles, egrets, wild buffalo, wild pig and saltwater crocodile. The crocodile was swimming in the water and then got onto the bank, although Damo claimed we were far enough away not to be in any danger.  She then got back into the billabong.

It’s so hot and the water looks so inviting, it’s understandable why people want to swim there, but impossible to understand why they would take a risk when estuarine crocodiles are everywhere and they are fast enough, big enough, strong enough and hungry enough to grab you from the edge of the water, kill you and eat you.

Viewpoint in Kakadu National Park
Viewpoint in Kakadu National Park

Another statement made in Crocodile Dundee was when he said crocs don’t like fresh meat. The crocodile hunters on the Adelaide River said the crocodiles love fresh meat, they like to keep some meat to go rotten which will subsequently attract more hungry animals which they can then kill and eat.  But I also heard conflicting information from one of the Kakadu guides that they don’t like fresh meat.  I think, if they’re hungry enough, they will eat you, fresh or otherwise.  So why take the chance?

That was the end of my hugely enjoyable day. The people on the other tour who did Gunlom in conjunction with another waterfall were a lovely young Austrian couple and an Aussie bloke who was very patient with me on the Gunlom waterfall walk, although to be fair, everyone was taking it steady, so he was probably just as slow as I was.

Private billabong where we enjoyed cheese and wine and saw lots of wildlife
Private billabong where we enjoyed cheese and wine and saw lots of wildlife

Damo told us a lot of stuff and quite a lot about Aboriginals because he knew some of them quite well. Everything is shrouded in secrecy, which I find very strange since I look at it all as quite superstitious. I have my own superstitions, like most people, which I tell myself are ridiculous, but are also no secret to anyone. Damo wasn’t permitted to tell us much about the Aboriginals. He’d worked in Kakadu for a while now and got to know a lot of the local people, had gained their trust and had been told lots of things about the Aboriginal community. But it was a closed to community that most people don’t get access to and most things that had been shared with him, he wasn’t allowed to disclose.

Today’s weather had been like the build up, the driver on the way back was saying. Hot with high humidity but no chance of rain. That’s what the build up is like, hot, high humidity, big clouds rolling in, thunder and lightning, but no rain. It must be spectacular, but getting no relief from rain for 2 months or more must be difficult. Those not acclimatised can go a bit crackers, it’s known as “going troppo”.  Damo was telling us this French lady in her 50s who was working in Kakadu got drunk and trashed a house because the build up got to her and she went “troppo”. She couldn’t remember what she’d done and denied the whole thing. It could be very extreme. I’d heard about it. It hadn’t seemed that bad to me today other than I was sweating buckets on my climb up to the top of Gunlom Falls, but I would have expected that with the heat and a steep climb up to the top of a waterfall anyway.  But to have that kind of weather for 2 months, I could understand how someone not used to it could go a bit loopy.

At the viewpoint with fellow tourists Anna and Val
At the viewpoint with fellow tourists Anna and Val

I’d had an amazing day.  If I had to pick one day out of my trip to Australia that was the best, this would be the one.

I travelled to the Top End of the Northern Territory in early August 2019.

My day tour to Gunlom Falls was the Footprints of Kakadu tour and cost $224AUD. This included pick up from my accommodation in Jabiru, transportation through the National Park and stops at Gunlom Falls and Ikoymarrwa Rock Pool, lunch, cheese and wine at a private billabong, snacks and Damo! I booked this through Kakadu Tours and Travel who charged at 1.5% fee for using a credit card when I booked in March 2019.

You need to buy a pass to enter Kakadu National Park. The pass is valid for 7 days and costs $25AUD in the Dry Season. You can buy the pass online from the Parks Australia website.

I stayed in the Anbinik Resort in Jabiru. I booked this through Tourism Top End who offer instant confirmation and secure server bookings. When I booked in February 2019, Tourism Top End charged a fee for using credit cards.

I drove to Kakadu National Park from Darwin. I rented a car from Bargain Car Rentals in Darwin. I booked this through Tourism Top End who have special deals with several car hire agencies in Darwin including offering unlimited kilometres which is rare in the Northern Territory. Please note that driving hire cars on unpaved roads without a 4WD vehicle is not permitted.

Read about my other days in Kakadu National Park

Kakadu and Arnhemland

Yellow Water and Anbangbang Billabong

Read about my time in Purnululu National Park

Purnululu National Park

Whip Snake Gorge

Australia: Kakadu & Arnhemland

My view of the Territory in Kakadu
My view of the Territory in Kakadu

I spent 6 weeks in Australia over July and August in South Australia, the Northern Territory and Western Australia.  If anyone asked me my favourite place on this journey through central Australia, I would answer, without hesitation, Kakadu National Park.  And if anyone asked me my favourite place in Kakadu, again without hesitation, I would reply, Gunlom Falls.

Amazing view across Kakadu National Park from Nadab Lookout
Amazing view across Kakadu National Park from Nadab Lookout

However, all of Kakadu was magical and as I spent a few days there, I can’t fit everything about Kakadu in one post.  So I’m dividing it into three parts to represent the 3 days I stayed in the National Park.

Head Rock in Arnhemland from the East Alligator River
Head Rock in Arnhemland from the East Alligator River

I was very excited to be Kakadu bound. It was interesting as I was driving from Corroboree to Kakadu and then through Kakadu National Park, recalling reading about people complaining about how boring the drive and the road is. All I can say is, they haven’t been to South Australia and driven the Oodnadatta Track!

The Oodnadatta Track is intensely boring and it’s hard to concentrate on driving because everything looks the same. It’s all flat and it’s all the same colour. You can barely distinguish the road from the surrounding land.

Another amazing view from Nadab Lookout
Another amazing view from Nadab Lookout

In Kakadu you have trees. You have rivers. Proper rivers, ones with water in them. Not the pretend rivers they have in the centre of Australia where they call them rivers if they have a dribble of water in them once every 30 years. I suppose if you haven’t done much driving anywhere else in Australia, are unprepared for the vast distances and all you see is trees for a hundred kilometres, you might consider it boring. But when it takes you all day to drive 300km on an appalling gravel road through nothing, where the road and landscape both look exactly the same, driving in Kakadu is a pleasure in comparison.  It was certainly a pleasure for me.  I loved it!

View across the East Alligator from Arnhemland
View across the East Alligator from Arnhemland

I arrived at the resort where I was staying. My room wasn’t ready, but they gave me one where no one had stayed the night before so it was already clean. I dropped off my stuff in the room.

The Anbinik Resort was disappointing. I’d been staying at a lot of places where I had to share a bathroom.  These varied from walking down a hallway to fishing out my torch to try and blunder my way through the darkness to an outside building, hoping not to come across any nasty animals on the way.

Sailing along the inaccurately named East Alligator River
Sailing along the inaccurately named East Alligator River

Anyway at the Anbinik Resort it was another toilet that I had to go outside to. Unfortunately when you’re travelling for a relatively long time in remote areas, it’s expensive and unless you’re a millionaire, some of the accommodation you have to stay at to be there is pretty basic. I am not a millionaire. Do you know who pays for Yorkshire Hayley? Yorkshire Hayley!

Yorkshire Hayley in Arnhemland!
Yorkshire Hayley in Arnhemland!

I do not get sponsorship for anything. But it means I can be brutally honest and not have to put meaningless disclaimers into my posts about staying as a guest invited by such and such resort but my opinions are my own. What a load of nonsense! If someone is giving you accommodation for free, firstly you’ll get the best available and secondly you’re hardly going to slam it, are you? No one else would invite you to stay for free if you had a reputation for pulling accommodation to pieces on your blog would they?

This photograph demonstrates why these deadly crocodiles are so difficult to see when they're in the water
This photograph demonstrates why these deadly crocodiles are so difficult to see when they’re in the water

Anyway the Anbinik Resort was a bit like a youth hostel. There was a fridge and kettle in my room, but there was a shared kitchen area between 6 rooms. There was a shared toilet and shower that I had to go outside to that was shared between 3 rooms. I only stayed long enough to drop off my stuff and then I drove to Ubirr for the Guluyambi Cultural Cruise.

The estuarine crocodiles, known as "salties" are what everyone comes to the Top End to see
The estuarine crocodiles, known as “salties” are what everyone comes to the Top End to see

The cruise is owned by Aboriginals and they take you down the inaccurately named East Alligator River. It’s inaccurately named because there are no alligators in the river. They’re crocodiles. But in 1820 when the area was being explored by Lieutenant King, there was no distinction between crocodiles and alligators and the lieutenant mistakenly believed the creatures to be alligators. And no one bothered to change the name of the river when it was realised that the animals were crocodiles.

This is one of around 3000 huge estuarine crocodiles living in the East Alligator River region
This is one of around 3000 huge estuarine crocodiles living in the East Alligator River region

Robbie was our guide, he used to be in all the promotional photos so he was known as George, as in George Clooney! He was very softly spoken so I couldn’t hear everything he said, but I caught quite a lot. It was a very interesting cruise. Very different to the others I’d been on.

Australia is well known for its unique animals. Everyone wants to see a kangaroo or a koala when they visit Australia and when you’re in the Top End, what everyone wants to see are big crocodiles!

Don't be fooled by this enormous croc pretending to be asleep
Don’t be fooled by this enormous croc pretending to be asleep

Robbie said there were about 3000 crocodiles in the river, so swimming was absolutely not an option. We saw plenty of crocodiles and they were big. I was happy.  I saw a lot of crocodiles in the Top End and I never got tired of seeing them.  Even if they are very scary!

You can barely see the crocodiles in the river which is amazing considering the size of some of them.  They have excellent camouflage which is why they’re successful hunters and so dangerous to humans. As with most animals, if they were brightly coloured and stood out, they wouldn’t be much good at hunting because everything would see them from a mile off. And these crocodiles can and will kill and eat people. At this time of year, in August, the height of the Dry Season, they’re particularly hungry because water levels are well down and most of the fish have been eaten already.  So no matter how hot it is, getting into the water is a really bad idea!

Because you can never have too many photos of man-eating crocs
Because you can never have too many photos of man-eating crocs

The Aboriginals did use to get into the water and cross the river when they were allowed to kill crocodiles. But as crocodiles were almost hunted to extinction, you now aren’t allowed to kill crocodiles unless you are in mortal danger. So swimming across the river is no longer allowed as the likelihood of having to kill a crocodile to save yourself is fairly high.

Sea Eagle in a tree on the banks of the East Alligator River
Sea Eagle in a tree on the banks of the East Alligator River

The name Guluyambi is an Aboriginal word that means paperbark raft.
Robbie told us a lot about the versatility of the paperbark tree, the bark used for making containers to drink from or carry things in, for mattresses, and it could be used to make a raft to cross the river. However, making a raft took two and a half hours and only carried 3 people.

The dead were also wrapped in paperbark and the grieving process was a very long one. I didn’t get it all, but I think he said they wrapped the body and left it until it exploded so the spirit could be free before they buried it.

Scenic views on the Guluyambi Cultural Cruise
Scenic views on the Guluyambi Cultural Cruise

We had a brief stop on the opposite side of the river to the Aboriginal owned Arnhemland. We had a bit of a walk round and I had some photos taken of me standing on various rocks. Hayley in Arnhemland!

Robbie welcomed us to Arnhemland on behalf of the Aboriginal owners and from there, before we got back on the boat, he demonstrated how far he could throw a spear if he used a tool to launch it from. It was the same concept as a bow and arrow, the arrow travels much further if you launch it from the bow than if you threw the arrow by hand. The spear fitted into a small pole that was held like a javelin and then the spear was launched from this pole holder. When Robbie threw it, it went right across to the other side of the river. That was impressive. 

Fearsome Mabuyu Hunting figure at the Ubirr Rock Art site
Fearsome Mabuyu Hunting figure at the Ubirr Rock Art site

After the cruise, since I was so close, I went to the Ubirr rock art site. It would save me another 80km round trip another day. I still had time this afternoon.

You might recognise Nadab Lookout as one of the locations where Crocodile Dundee was filmed
You might recognise Nadab Lookout as one of the locations where Crocodile Dundee was filmed

It was a fairly short walk around the rock art sites Ubirr. The rock art depicts traditional stories, the Rainbow Serpent was a particularly important symbol who travelled through the area in human form. Stories about the Rainbow Serpent could be found all over Kakadu. The rock art here in Kakadu was very well preserved and very colourful, especially compared to what I’d seen around Uluru. It was clearer and brighter, so much easier to make out the figures. It was considered disrespectful to erase rock art, however, subsequent generations were permitted to paint on top of the existing art, so there were some instances where more recent art had been superimposed onto an earlier drawing.

A kangaroo at the Ubirr Rock Art site
A kangaroo at the Ubirr Rock Art site

The main thing was the climb to the top of the rocks to Nadab Lookout. It was quite a steep climb in places and although there is a marked path, there are several ways to get to the top of the rocks. It is an amazing spot to climb to and I would say that you really should not miss this. I was rewarded with a fabulous 360 degree view.

A turtle being hunted by locals in a paperbark raft is represented in this rock art scene
A turtle being hunted by locals in a paperbark raft is represented in this rock art scene

This was a spot I recognised from Crocodile Dundee and I completely understand why they chose this spot for the film. It was lush greenery in one direction and dramatic rock formations in the other.

I could see quite a lot of smoke from the top of Nadab Lookout. This made the view even more dramatic. The reason for the smoke was because managed fires were deliberately set during the Dry Season to better control the National Park during the Build Up when there is no rain, but frequent thunderstorms and the lightning strikes that come with them. Without the managed burning of some areas during the Dry Season, it was possible that a lightning strike could start an uncontrollable fire that would rage through the Park. These fires also tend to be much hotter than earlier in the Dry Season. The Aboriginals had done this for thousands of years and it was still a very effective way of controlling fires during the Build Up.

The smoke behind me at Nadab Lookout is from one of the deliberate, managed fires set in Kakadu National Park in the Dry Season
The smoke behind me at Nadab Lookout is from one of the deliberate, managed fires set in Kakadu National Park in the Dry Season

A lot of people came up here for sunset. As I wasn’t allowed to drive my car after sunset, I couldn’t stay here for that, besides which, when anywhere is supposed to be a good place to watch the sunset you get about 3 million tourists up there, which does rather spoil the atmosphere. I was happy to be up here in the afternoon instead.

Another view across Kakadu National Park from wonderful Nadab Lookout
Another view across Kakadu National Park from wonderful Nadab Lookout

I had been worried about hiking in Kakadu. I thought it might be too hot to be comfortable, but I was surprised at how pleasant the conditions were. There was no denying it was hot, but hiking in the Top End was infinitely better than in the Red Centre. There was some shade in places and the insects weren’t bad at all. I would certainly recommend that you get out and do some hiking in Kakadu, even if you only do some short hikes otherwise you will be hugely missing out. A mix of hikes, cruises and driving is a good way to appreciate what Kakadu has to offer.

I’d only been here half a day and I’d already fallen in love with Kakadu National Park.

I travelled to the Top End of the Northern Territory in early August 2019.

I went on the Guluyambi Cultural Cruise along the East Alligator River. The cruise operates 4 times a day during the Dry Season and costs $79AUD. The cruise has a maximum of 25 guests on each departure. It takes approximately 45 minutes to drive to the boat ramp near Ubirr from Jabiru.

I visited the Ubirr Rock Art site in the East Alligator Area of Kakadu National Park. The park website has lots of information about the walks in around the park.

You need to buy a pass to enter Kakadu National Park. The pass is valid for 7 days and costs $25AUD in the Dry Season. You can buy the pass online from the Parks Australia website.

I stayed in the Anbinik Resort in Jabiru. I booked this through Tourism Top End who offer instant confirmation and secure server bookings. When I booked in February 2019, Tourism Top End charged a fee for using credit cards.

I drove to Kakadu National Park from Darwin. I rented a car from Bargain Car Rentals in Darwin. I booked this through Tourism Top End who have special deals with several car hire agencies in Darwin including offering unlimited kilometres which is rare in the Northern Territory. Please note that driving hire cars on unpaved roads without a 4WD vehicle is not permitted.

Read about my other days in Kakadu National Park

Infinity at Gunlom Falls

Yellow Water and Anbangbang Billabong

Read about my time in Purnululu National Park

Purnululu National Park

Whip Snake Gorge