Cloncurry, home of the 2021 Australian Survivor TV Series

Everything you need to know about Cloncurry,
home of the 2021 Australian Survivor TV Series

Everything you need to know about Cloncurry, home of the 2021 Australian Survivor TV Series

It’s the little Outback Queensland town with a gutsy big past, but for most Australians, Cloncurry is about to go on record as the mightiest backdrop of any Survivor series when the 2021 production goes to air starting July 18. Thanks to its spectacular sunsets, rugged rocky outcrops and a population of a few thousand residents who helped the town take out “Queensland’s friendliest” in 2013, the “Curry” (as it’s affectionately dubbed) is about to explode onto our Road Trippin Radar.

So, what do you do in a destination, previously known for big copper loads and even bigger bulls? Here’s everything you ever needed to know about Cloncurry.

1.  Earn your Outback Queensland stripes over a crisp Great Northern ale at Crocodile Dundee’s Walkabout Creek Hotel in the neighbouring town of McKinlay. The backdrop for the famous bar brawl scene from the blockbuster movie, the pub is an insta-worthy stop for travelers. Aside from its real meets rustic and rather kitsch setting, it’s also a good place for a counter lunch and a comfy overnight stay.

2.  Holy uranium, go underground. The Old Mary Kathleen Mine is an adventurer’s dream on a North West Tours’ outing to the open-cut uranium mine. Once a bustling home to almost a 1000 residents, today Mary Kathleen is a spooky ghost town. The four-hour tour departs from Mt Isa and costs $119 per person including morning tea.

3.  Make a beeline for John Flynn Place, a tiny museum that celebrates an era when aviation and radio united the Outback, and the Royal Flying Doctors Service provided a welcome health service for its residents. Here you’ll learn how Arthur Affleck, the first flying doctor pilot, hired a single engine timber and material plane from Qantas for the very first Royal Doctors flight. Aviation lovers should also keep their eyes peeled for the original Qantas hangar which welcomed the first Qantas passenger plane 100 years ago. And it is still operational.

4.  Fish, boat, or just chill at Chinaman Creek Dam. Located 3km west of Cloncurry, the surprisingly pretty waterhole is the focal point for Survivor water challenges. For travellers it’s the best point to cast off for Sooty Grunter, Barramundi, Red Claw and Yabbies and to take in sunset views of the township and the Cloncurry River. The dam was built in 1994 to take advantage of water flowing from Chinaman Creek and the Cloncurry River.

5.  Got a 4WD? Then take the 23 km Ballara Mining Heritage Trail and track the remarkable natural beauty of the land. The start of the trail is on the south side of the Overlanders Way, about 60km from Cloncurry. The trail journeys through spinifex landscapes and rocky outcrops millions of years in the making and travels past the site of three former townships that are remnants of a boom-and-bust story of the mining industry. The reward at the end of the trail is a dip in Fountain Springs. Movie buffs will recognise this naturally fed waterhole as the location where Sue Charlton, Croc Dundee’s love interest, was almost taken by a giant saltie.

6.  Proof that not every alliance leads to survival, early pioneers Burke & Wills passed through Cloncurry on their ill-fated expedition before perishing in the bush. Today Burke’s prized water bottle can be seen at the Cloncurry Unearthed Museum. Rockheads will also love the extensive gem and mineral collection and the fact that they can obtain fossickers licences and maps here.

7.  Need another reason to hit the hottest town in the Outback? This year the Curry Merry Muster Festival returns from August 6 – 8 with two days of rodeo action, live music, bush poets’ breakfast and the Brophy’s Boxing tent. Or, celebrate the true Cloncurry way with a street party on Scarr Street with live entertainment, tickle your tastebuds with the curry cooking competition, and cheer on your favourite team in the comical mine cart races. Cloncurry Beat The Heat Festival is on September 10 – 12.

Fun facts about Cloncurry:
• Like it’s topography, Cloncurry is never down and out. The town is built 200 m above sea level and is surrounded by a series of hills, spectacular rocky outcrops and a rich river flowing by.
• With summer temperatures flogging the 40’s and winter days hovering the mid 20s, the town is hot. It is appropriately dubbed “The Curry”.
• Burke & Wills passed nearby on their fatal expedition in 1861 – Burke’s water bottle can be found in the Cloncurry Museum. Meanwhile, a memorial to the explorers can be seen 43km west of town on the bank of the Corella River.
• In 1867, Earnest Henry discovered copper and set up camp paving a way for the copper and gold industry that still exists today.
• In the late 1800s, Cloncurry was Queensland’s largest ‘Ghan town’ with more than 2000 camels for transport
• On November 3, 1922 Qantas flew its first passenger (Alexander Kennedy) from Longreach to Cloncurry (landing in the very first Qantas hangar) and sparking a fun outback feud over which town can claim the globally recognized brand.
• The first flight of the Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia place took place on May 15, 1928,
• In 2006, acclaimed Waanyi Woman, Alexis Wright, was awarded the Miles Franklin prize for her novel Carpentaria. She was born in Cloncurry in 1950 and wrote a fierce epic that honours Indigenous culture and the impacts of colonization.
• Cloncurry was voted as Queensland’s friendliest town in 2013.
• 2017 a two-year-old Brahman bull, bred 100km west of Rockhampton, was sold to Cloncurry beef breeders for $325,000, nine times the price of the average sales at the auction.
• Dame Mary Gilmore OBE, who is featured on the ten-dollar note, rests in the Cloncurry cemetery.

For more quirky facts about Cloncurry and what to see and do in this beautiful part of Outback Queensland, click here to read on!