There is no road access to most of the Kimberley coast. The only way in is by sea or by helicopter, and the tides — running to twelve metres in the larger inlets — make the navigation demanding. This is why the Kimberley has remained largely unexplored by the charter market, and why those who do make the voyage describe it as transformative.
The geology is ancient and violent-looking: burnt-orange sandstone that fractures into sheer cliff faces, narrow gorges that admit a superyacht at high water and close to a trickle at low, waterfalls that drop directly into tidal pools. The Horizontal Falls — where a tidal race forces water through a narrow gap at speeds approaching 10 knots — are unlike anything else in Australian waters.
The rock art is equally extraordinary. The Wandjina figures painted in caves throughout the region are among the oldest and most significant in the world; many can only be accessed from the water. The traditional custodians of the country are the Ngarinyin, Wunambal and Worrorra peoples, and a Kimberley charter operates within a framework of cultural respect that is part of what makes the experience meaningful.
The season is tightly defined: May to September, outside the wet season. In October the first storms arrive; by December the region is largely inaccessible.