The train to Kuranda is a trip in itself
By Chris Oliver
WHERE: Kuranda, Australia. Kuranda Village, high in the Atherton Tablelands in northern Queensland, Australia, is an unusual place to visit, but its the journey there and back that grabs your attention.
GETTING THERE: From Cairns, take the Kuranda Scenic Railway. Built in 1891, the railway was built to link the Tablelands' tin mines with the Queensland coast. Considered an epic engineering feat, the narrow wooden railway track ascends the yawning Barron River Gorge in a series of switchbacks, tunnels and bridges. Looking out from the tiny wooden rail cars, the gorge walls on the left are vertical, jungle-clad cliffs close enough in places to touch, but on the right is a sheer 600-foot drop to nowhere. In the cars, a warning not to sit on the right side of the train for those scared of heights makes perfect sense. The 20-mile journey takes almost two hours, ending at Kuranda, a small forest community famous for its odd characters, markets and artsy atmosphere.
THREE TO SEE:
GETTING BACK: Skyrail Rainforest Cableway offers a stunning 5-mile gondola ride high above the rainforest canopy back to Cairns. A roundtrip to Kuranda going by Scenic Railway and returning via Skyrail costs $72.50. www.kuranda.org.
Reach Chris Oliver at coliver@honoluluadvertiser.com.