Resort Cairns

Rapture, warming sunshine and snap shots of a blissful beach holiday, these are magical ingredients for the break of your life when you and your family venture to Cairns and God’s own Queensland.

Blessed with a holiday weather pattern most of the year, offering temperatures in summer (October-April) of 29-33°C, and winter months (April-October) 25-29°C, Cairns can offer some of the planet’s most vibrant natural attractions, the reef, the rainforest and the Australian Outback, and they are all here awaiting your discovery.

The very friendly locals of Tropical North Queensland will show you the kind of warm and courteous hospitality that has become the standard to aspire to for other tourism destinations. Adventure tourism, night life, fine eating and shopping multipy the charm and attraction of this unique destination.

If you have been here previously, welcome back. If you are here for the first time, bask in our attractions and make the most of your holiday.

Australia’s finest non-capital city, Cairns is the international front door to Far North Queensland. It is a vibrant cosmopolitan city with warm, sunny tropical days contrasted by cooling onshore breezes. Enjoy a walk along the iconic Esplanade or satisfy your lust for food in one of Cairns’ many multi-cultural, diverse and award-winning eateries.

Resort Cairns – What Cairns has to Offer

Cairns gives access to the World Heritage listed Great Barrier Reef and the Wet Tropics Rainforests along with the Australian Outback. Cairns, with its international and domestic airport, is the first stop for most visitors who want to see the real Australia.

Bask on the tropical beaches, dive on the reef and experience the unique tropical rainforests that date back to when Australia was part of ancient Gondwanaland, thousands of eons ago.

Take a dip in the modern Cairns Esplanade lagoon, then look across the serene waters of Trinity Inlet and you will view coastal mountains and mangrove environs that have not changed since the site was named by Captain James Cook in 1770.

The beautiful Esplanade Lagoon is the perfect location to spend a lazy day soaking up the sun and wading in the lagoon’s cool and inviting shallows. There are many shady spots to take refuge from the sun in the heat of the day, as well as barbeque facilities. The boardwalk has unique displays of Cairns’s local history and has many exercise facilities for those keen on getting a bit more active.

Cairns is extremely well suited to travel by foot, or transport by cycle. Well trodden paths and dedicated walking paths are popular. A visit to the Cairns Botanical Gardens is not to be missed. It features 38 hectares of native Australian gardens which are kept to big city botanical garden standards, and many plants found here cannot be seen elsewhere.  Located among the fauna is a coffee shop and restaurant, which is open daily for breakfast and lunch. Entry to the gardens is free.

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