As first impressions go, it’s right up there. It starts with the overture of driving into the edges of the magnificent Daintree, the world’s oldest living rainforest at 180 million years old, as the sun sets. We’re in Far North Queensland, so the sunset’s one of those rapid tropical ones, light then dark, like someone flipped a switch. And so we drive through the gates of Silky Oaks Lodge in darkness with only a few soft spots illuminating the driveway or flaring up into sections of the lush forest behind which, apparently, is the resort.
The density of the foliage and the canopy overhead engulf you, like some kind of enchanted jungle. And then just as we park, it begins to rain, sudden and steady in the humidity, like another switch has been flipped. And while the rain is apt, given that we’re in an ancient rainforest, it also poses the logistical problem of finding and getting ourselves and our luggage to wherever reception is without getting drenched.
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