nq111 wrote:Thanks for that John,
Looks like you did alright given the family nature of the holiday and hopefully got a taste for the region. Would have been wet recently too which makes the character of the rainforest nicer (IMO).
Unfortunately, NQ is not very well set up for the serious walking crowd - and many of the better walks seem to have very limited public information.
Yes I'd agree with all that nq111. Before the trip I picked up a 2nd hand copy of
Tropical walking tracks : Port Douglas, the Daintree & Cooktown by Kym Dungey & Jane Whytlaw. That helped with some local walk info. Even so I had difficulty finding the start of the Hartleys Creek Falls track. I found a man whipper snippering in the grounds of the old crocodile farm next to it, which he told me is now private accommodation. He vaguely knew the track but had only attemped to walk up there once, apparently finding the going too difficult beyond the rock pools about halfway up. He didn't think it was possible to reach the falls, which left me scratching my head

. Anyway he was very obliging and got out an old topo map which confirmed that I was in the right vicinity and heading for the intended spot. He wished me luck but I had no trouble locating the falls and the walk was quite easy, old fire trail mainly with just a few steep pinches. The start was at an old wire gate with a no unauthorised access sign (or similar wording), virtually overgrown at the start and in places and not very inviting initially, but persistence paid off and it was well worth the effort

. I think locals do go up there occasionally as I noticed several cars parked near the gate on Saturday plus plenty of evidence of mountain bike tyre tracks during my walk. And yes, walking in the Daintree rainforest in the rain was really nice

.