Welcome to Indigenous Australia’s most significant cultural expedition—where ancient songlines guide modern discovery, and every encounter reveals knowledge systems spanning 65,000 unbroken years.
Over eight days, you’ll navigate sacred waters between the Tiwi Islands and East Arnhem Land, guided by traditional owners whose families have stewarded these lands since time immemorial. This isn’t cultural tourism—you’ll participate in ochre mining ceremonies, witness bark painting creation by internationally renowned Yolngu artists, and learn directly from Elders about kinship systems governing one of Earth’s oldest living cultures.
Each day brings privileged access to communities who choose to share their stories, from Tiwi’s distinctive pukumani poles to Yolngu’s intricate clan structures connecting people to specific Country through ancestral law. Our small expedition community of just 30 guests ensures respectful exchanges impossible on larger vessels, whether you’re fishing estuaries with traditional owners or gathering bush medicines that have sustained communities for millennia.
Experience Indigenous Australia through genuine partnership with traditional owners who determine how their stories are shared.
The Tiwi Islands and East Arnhem Land represent Indigenous Australia’s most culturally intact regions, where traditional governance structures, languages, and ceremonial practices continue unbroken from ancestral times. Unlike mainland Australia where colonization severely disrupted cultural continuity, these remote communities maintained autonomy enabling preservation of knowledge systems, artistic traditions, and spiritual connections to Country that define Aboriginal identity.
You’ll engage with internationally celebrated artists whose bark paintings hang in major galleries worldwide, learn from Elders whose knowledge encompasses everything from sustainable fishing practices to complex kinship laws, and understand how contemporary Indigenous communities balance cultural preservation with modern aspirations. This expedition operates under strict cultural protocols established by traditional owners—from where we travel to what stories can be shared—ensuring every encounter respects the extraordinary privilege of accessing Australia’s oldest living culture through relationships built on mutual respect over decades.
Day-by-Day Adventures
Darwin
Board Paspaley Pearl as afternoon light catches Darwin Harbour, beginning your journey north across waters traversed by Makassan trepangers and YolÅ‹u mariners for centuries. Meet your 29 fellow adventurers while our expedition team prepares you for privileged access to Tiwi Islands’ distinctive artistic traditions ahead.
DAY 1
Pirlangimpi, Melville Island
Visit Munupi Arts & Crafts where Tiwi artists work in pottery, weaving, carving and painting using techniques connecting to pukumani funeral ceremonies. Witness distinctive geometric patterns—vibrant ochres against black backgrounds—created with earth pigments enhancing reds through fire, watching traditional body paint designs translate to contemporary media.
DAY 2
Mount Borradaile
Scenic flight to Awunbarna’s sandstone galleries reveals 8,000-year-old Rainbow Serpent paintings and intricate x-ray art showing animals’ internal structures. Walk through registered sacred sites where traditional owner partnerships mean artifacts remain undisturbed—grinding stones, ancient tools, and contact art depicting Macassan praus alongside European ships.
DAY 3
Victoria Settlement & Port Bremmer
Explore Britain’s 1838 Port Essington settlement ruins—round Cornish chimneys, elevated Governor’s residence, cemetery markers telling stories of tropical isolation that defeated colonial ambitions within eleven years. Afternoon at Paspaley’s remote pearl farm reveals techniques perfecting Australian South Sea pearl production in pristine coastal waters 370 kilometres from civilization.
DAY 4
Maningrida
Visit Maningrida Arts & Culture representing 700+ artists across 7,000 square kilometres speaking 12 distinct languages. Witness master weavers transforming pandanus and jungle vine using ancestral techniques, while bark painters create distinctive rarrk crosshatching with ochres harvested from specific clan estates—materials carrying cultural significance beyond aesthetic value.
DAY 5
Galiwin'ku & Gugari Rip
Receive Welcome to Country from Galpu traditional owners at Elcho Island Arts, watching weaving demonstrations creating dillybags following clan-specific patterns. Afternoon navigation through Gugari Rip—50-metre-wide channel with 12-knot tidal currents racing between ancient rock formations—demands precise timing and respect for natural forces shaping these passages.
DAY 6
Yirrkala & Bawaka
Experience Rirratjingu Elders’ genuine cultural expression through song and dance at Buku-LarrÅ‹gay Mulka Art Centre, home to historic Bark Petitions igniting Australia’s land rights movement. Afternoon at Bawaka homeland brings hands-on participation—spear-making, bush medicine gathering, traditional cooking—learning through lived experience rather than staged demonstrations.
DAY 7
Yirrkala
Conclude your journey where continuous YolÅ‹u occupation spans tens of thousands of years. Reflect on artistic diversity from Tiwi geometric patterns through Maningrida’s multilingual complexity to Yirrkala’s internationally significant bark paintings—contemporary expressions of 65,000-year-old knowledge systems asserting Indigenous rights and cultural continuity through art.
DAY 8
Departure dates
Ocean Double/Single Stateroom
$14,995
Ocean Twin Stateroom
$15,995
Ocean Stateroom
$17,995
Horizon Suite
$20,995
Pearl Suite
$25,995
Prices are in AUD$ per person based on twin share. Single supplement pricing is available on application. *Sole occupancy of stateroom #107 attracts no single surcharge.
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