Step ashore — one of only a handful of visitors ever permitted — and receive a private briefing inside Australia's most remote operational weather station. The data collected here has guided cyclone warnings across Queensland for over a century; it is a living piece of scientific history.
What to expect
After a short Zodiac transfer to the beach, you walk across the coral-rubble islet — the entire thing is barely 400 metres across — to the weatherboard station compound. The duty meteorologist explains the island's role in tracking Coral Sea cyclogenesis, shows you the instrument arrays and balloon launch facilities, and fields questions with refreshing candour. The sense of absolute remoteness — no roads, no shops, just science and sea — is profoundly affecting. Visits are brief (30–45 minutes) out of respect for operations.
Good to know
Landing is at the discretion of BOM and sea conditions; it is never guaranteed. Wear closed shoes for the coral-rubble foreshore. Do not touch or enter any instrument enclosures. This is one of cruising's rarest privileges — treat it accordingly.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Willis Island — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.