Daintree Eco Lodge & Spa - Daintree Rainforest Accommodation - Spa Retreat - Daintree Spa - Aboriginal Culture -- Rainforest Weddings - Aboriginal Art Gallery

Daintree Eco Lodge and Spa Location

Daintree Eco Lodge & Spa projects a sense of exotic remoteness, belied by the facts:

The Cook highway from Cairns offers a feast of scenery ranging from secluded palm fringed beaches, hidden coves and rugged headlands, the rich green of lush sugar-cane fields, through to the mist shrouded rainforest clad mountains.  Rated as one of Australia's top 10 scenic drives.

Follow the highway north from Cairns past the Port Douglas turnoff, and follow  the signs to Daintree.  No turn-offs or ferry crossings are required.

Population

The Daintree Eco Lodge & Spa falls under the Douglas Shire, which spans 2,456 sq km from Port Douglas to Cape Tribulation, with a resident population of approx 12,000.

DAINTREE NATIONAL PARK

The Daintree National Park was added to the World Heritage List in 1988 in recognition of its universal natural values.The area is estimated to be 135 million years old and is the oldest living tropical rainforest on earth. It is one of the most diverse and beautiful examples of Mother Nature in the world, home to a large range of plants and animals, and all are found within the largest chunk of rainforest in Australia - an area spanning approximately 1200 square kilometres. This World Heritage Listed area contains the highest number of plant and animal species that are rare, or threatened with extinction, anywhere in the world. The Daintree Rainforest is a unique area, precariously balanced between the advances of development and the warnings of environmentalists. The Daintree Rainforest contains 30% of frog, marsupial and reptile species in Australia, and 65% of Australia's bat and butterfly species. 20% of bird species in the country can be found in this area. And it all lives in an area that takes up 0.2% of the landmass of Australia. With approximately 430 species of birds living amongst the trees, there is 13 species that are found nowhere else in the world. 

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GREAT BARRIER REEF MARINE PARK (GBRMP)

GBRMP was created in 1975 under legislation called the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Act 1975. The Marine Park is 345,500 km sq in area (the largest marine protected area in the world) Southern boundary is just north of Bundaberg and the Northern boundary is in the Coral Sea, south of the Gulf of Papua. The average depth of the water is 35 metres and has  2900 reef systems and 900+ islands.

DISTANCES                                                  (approx to the nearest kilometre)

From Daintree Eco Lodge & Spa…

Daintree Village                           3 km
Wonga Beach                            14 km
Mossman                                    31 km
Port Douglas                              45 km
Cape Tribulation                       53 km
Cairns Airport                           113 km
Cairns City                                120 km

From Cairns …

Brisbane (State Capital)      1,826 km
Alice Springs                        2,435 km
Sydney                                2,853 km
Ayers Rock                           2,883 km
Melbourne                            3,501 km

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CLIMATE

The Daintree Rainforest in Australia provides one of the best examples of tropical environment in the world. It is part of a region in Tropical North Queensland called the “Wet Tropics.” It receives vast amounts of rain, however this usually occurs in torrential downpours that last only a few hours at a time. When it’s not raining, usually the sun is out in full force highlighting the vibrant colours of the rainforest and the sea.

The rainforest has about 120 days of rain per year, with an average of 2013 mm falling per year. Floods develop quickly in the river when rain is plentiful. In the wet season of 1996, record flood levels swamped roads and properties throughout the Daintree region. Statistics gathered at the rainfall station recorded 606 millimetres of rain falling in 24 hours on March 6th of that year.

Climatic data was first recorded in the Daintree Rainforest in 1884, and has continued every since. The average minimum temperature is 21-22 degrees Celsius and maximum of 28-29 degrees. Temps in the rainforest are surprisingly mild due to the protective canopy layer of tall trees. The air is often humid but cool.

  • The highest recorded temperature is 36.7 degrees Celsius.
  • The lowest recorded temperature is 8.9 degrees Celsius.

Sea temperatures range from 23 degrees in July (winter) to 29 degrees
Every season in the Daintree region offers a different, unique experience. The climate is truly tropical with the Dry Season, roughly May to October, offering warm days and cool nights with low humidity. November to April is generally the Wet Season when the heavens frequently open releasing torrential rain, and the days and nights are hotter.

The most popular season for visitors tends to be during the cooler Dry Season although many people take advantage of the Wet Season months, between November and April, when the region is not as crowded, the weather is very often superb and everything is looking lush and green with all the creeks and waterfalls running to capacity.

 

Summer

Autumn

Winter

Spring

 

Nov

Dec

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Av Max Temp °C

31

31

31

31

30

29

27

26

26

26

28

29

Av Min Temp °C

22

23

23

23

23

21

20

17

17

17

18

21

Av Rainfall mm

280

390

292

727

682

421

109

82

40

72

57

100

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