A palm tree-lined beachside suburb on the Cairns northern beaches, this is the favoured hangout of celebrities and A-listers. Home to some of the city’s best bars and restaurants, Palm Cove also has free beachfront BBQs and landscaped gardens perfect for laid back picnics.
Things to see in Cairns
Tourist offices
Address: 51 The Esplanade, Cairns, Queensland, 4870, Australia
Tel: +61 07 4051 3588.
Opening Hours:
Mon–Fri 0830-1800. Weekends & public holidays 1000-1800.
www.tropicalnorthqueensland.org.auThere are a variety of free tourism magazines in Cairns, including maps, brochures, and itineraries available at Cairns and Tropical North Visitor Information Centre. Follow their blog for inspirational ideas to explore this popular city.
Cairns is in the heart of tropical Queensland’s fruit bowl and there is no better place to savour fresh regional produce than at Rusty’s Markets. Running for three days a week, the market also has stalls selling flowers, deli items, baked goods, clothing and jewellery.
The Skyrail Rainforest Cableway begins 15km (9.3 miles) north of Cairns and carries visitors over 7.5km (4.7 miles) of pristine rainforest to the beautiful village of Kuranda. It provides riders with unique views of the lush canopy of the ancient rainforest, as well as breathtaking views of the Barron Gorge and Falls.
The most extensive butterfly aviary in the southern hemisphere, the Australian Butterfly Sanctuary houses over 1,500 butterflies from a variety of tropical species. Top tip: wear a white top to attract butterflies to land on your shoulders.
Cairns Art Gallery, housed within the majestic old Public Offices Building, displays a wide variety of work by many of far north Queensland's finest contemporary artists and also houses touring exhibitions of work by some of Australia's most significant artists.
This quite extraordinary adventure-style zoo, located in the domed roof of a hotel casino in central Cairns, allows visitors to get up close to fascinating Australian fauna, such as koalas, snakes and kookaburras. Dome climbs, challenging ropes courses and zip-lines add to the thrills; visitors can zip-line over a 4m-long (13-ft) saltwater crocodile, nicknamed Goliath, who is the star exhibit at the zoo.
Fitzroy Island is a continental island 29km south-east of Cairns with white sand beaches surrounding a hilly island draped in rainforest. Go there on a day trip for snorkelling, kayaking, hiking and beachcombing, or stay overnight at the Fitzroy Island Resort, which has bars and restaurants overlooking the Coral Sea.
A walk through the Flecker Botanical Gardens, much wilder than most of Australia's botanic gardens, feels like a walk through the rainforest. The gardens are located only 4km (2.5 miles) from the central business district, and attractions include the purpose-built Conservatory, Fernery, Orchid House, and Aboriginal Plant Use section.
Travel between Cairns and Kuranda, known as the village in the rainforest, on a historic train that winds its way through Wet Tropics Rainforest into the mountains west of Cairns, past beautiful waterfalls and into the spectacular Barron Gorge.
Tjapukai, which opened in 1987, was Australia's first Aboriginal cultural attraction and is still the one with the most awards to its name. It's located in a 10-hectare (25-acre) park just 15 minutes north of central Cairns. Visitors can watch traditional song and dance, learn about Aboriginal beliefs and history, and even try their hand at boomerang and spear throwing, didgeridoo playing or boomerang painting.
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