(CNN) — A fully serviced private island in Australia’s Southern Great Barrier Reef is now on the market — just in time for those who want a place to ride out the Covid-19 pandemic.
The island is currently owned by Wayne and Laureth Rumble, through their company Sojourn Retreats.
“It was the ideal place to spend lockdown during the pandemic,” the couple tells CNN Travel via email.
“It is secluded, private and yet you have total freedom to move around, be outside … our kids were playing in the playground, on the beach and life just felt very normal until we switched on the news.”
A self-contained holiday island
In addition to using wind and solar power, the island has a filtering system that turns rainwater into drinking water.
Other facilities include two oceanfront bungalows (filled with a games room, library and lounge), a licensed bar and lounge area, two registered moorings, a helicopter pad as well as a custom-built 36-passenger boat.
Won in a poker game, made famous in a beer ad
The island is home to five beach cottages and two ocean bungalows.
Pumpkin Island
Prior to 1961, the island was an oyster farm that belonged to a man called Snigger Findlay.
“(A couple by the name of) Roger and Merle Mason fell in love with Pumpkin Island, but Snigger did not want to sell it. So when Roger challenged Snigger to a game of poker, he said that if he wins Snigger would have to sell the island to Roger. So Roger won and bought the island for £60,” say the Rumbles.
The Rumbles bought the island in 2003 for AUD1.3 million ($909,000 USD) after seeing an article in the newspaper.
The island was leased by a Queensland beer company between 2012 and 2015 to promote their beer Castlemaine XXXX and was renamed XXXX Island during that period.
“Their customers could win an all-expenses-paid holiday for themselves and three friends to the island if they found the golden beer can in a case of beer. Almost like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” say the Rumbles.
The couple say they are selling the island because they would like to move closer to their family in New Zealand.
“We would love to hand the island over to someone who would care for it as much as we do. It is a very special place and ideally, the new owners would find as much joy in the beauty and breathtaking nature as we have.”