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Port Moresby cultural, Arts & nature Highlights
The Iconic Goroka Show and Mudmen Experience
Birds of Paradise on Mt Hagen Highlands Sojourn Scenically Stunning Lake Kutubu Festival  
East New Britain's Rabaul & Gazelle Peninsula, Volcanoes & The Idylic Duke of York Islands

Friday 18th Sept. to Thursday 1st Oct. 2026
Friday 17th to Thursday 30th September 2027
 14 Days / 13 Nights Small Group Tour 
AUD13,490  p.p 

TWIN SHARE

Single Supplement AUD890 P.P.

Tour Package includes All Meals, Accommodation, Guides, Sightseeing, Entry Fees to all activities, Porterage, Transfers, Land & Water Transport.  An Experienced Australian Tour Leader & Knowledgeable Local Guides.

*Price ALSO includes all 4 Domestic Flights.                                       

We are the only tour company that does this for you !

EXCLUSIONS : The price does not include international airfares, visa costs, alcoholic and soft  drinks or any meals not included in the itinerary. NOTE : Flynn's Tours will advise on the most suitable air route for your International travel and how to process your visitor visa in an efficient manner. 

 Agri-tourism -  Birds of Paradise - Colonial Era Intrigue & Characters  - Delicious Foods & Fruits - New Britain's WW2 Military Relics - German Colonial  History - Tambu Shell Money - Bainings & Tolai Tubuan Customs - Rabaul's Volcano Climb  - Kokoda Track - Varirata National Park - Sogeri Plateau - Duke of York Isles & Wild Dolphins, Turtles & Dugongs -  Seafood Beach BBQs with Friendly Locals - Iconic Goroka Show - Bilum Festival - Ultimate Mudmen Experience - Birds of Paradise Mt Hagen Highland Highway Sojourn - Stunning Lake Kutubu and it's Intimate & Culturally Significant Festival - Scull Caves - Canoe Races.

Rabaul Volcao Climb Edit

Flynn's Tours is the only Tour operator serving Papua New Guinea that includes the cost of all domestic airfares in your Package. 

 * For this tour a price cap of AUD1,200 included in the total package price should cover the cost of the 4 Domestic Flights. Following consultation any excess to this price cap will be billed to the client. Papua New Guinea is a developing country with a mountainous mainland surrounded by many remote islands. The regional centres are for the most part un-connected by road. Travellers normally book with only 2 nationally owned airlines that provide the only reliable air service. Airfares are expensive and without experience they are difficult for outsiders, even travel agents to book without the risking the smooth running of the most extensive and interesting  small group tours of PNG. Flynn's Tours experienced staff remove the risk and with all tour participants booked in a group booking we can provide the lowest prices possible and manage your bookings for you and allow you to enjoy your holiday without frustration and disappointment 

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14 Days of Culture-Arts- Music- Scenery- History-Agritourism       Iconic Goroka Show & Lake Kutubu         Festival plus Niugini Island Odyssey      with Rabaul Volcanoes & War History      

Day By Day Itinerary:

Day 1 – Arrive Port Moresby to  Goroka Friday 18th Sept. 2026

Day 2 – Iconic Goroka Show & Asaro Mudmen - Sat. 19th Sept. 2026

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This morning we attend the iconic Goroka Show and your guide will explain the customs of the great variety of tribal groups and where they source the many materials that are woven into their colourful and visually striking costumes and also the substances that they decorate their bodies with.

​During the day we visit the McCarthy Museum. The museum houses collections of artefacts and specimens from the Highlands region including wooden dishes, stone mortars, stone blades, magic stones and sandstones for making stone blades. There are also some WWII relics on display including a P-39 Airacobra.

We attend the agricultural show component of the Goroka Show that highlights the farming activities of the Highlanders. Displays include unique floral species produced by the vibrant local floriculture industry. The regions crops include broccoli, kau kau or sweet potato, carrots, ginger and peanuts are examples of produce that grow well here; nearby Bena Bena is known for its pineapples.

Later in the day at the conclusion of the Days activities at the Goroka Showgrounds we will visit the Asaro Gihiraa Korex village. Here you will enjoy a short climb to the summit of Mt Gurupoka to view a performance by the iconic Asaro Mudmen and along the way climb through a narrow secretive entrance into a surprisingly large cave where the local tribe would shelter from attacking enemies. This is truly the best Mudmen experience in Goroka’s Asaro area. Legend has is that once, when the local tribe had been attacked, those not

killed or captured fled into the Asaro River to hide from their attackers. Here they became covered in the white river mud. When dusk fell they decided to return to their village, still caked in mud – though not deliberately so. When the enemy tribe, still in village, saw the men now caked in mud they fled, believing them to be spirits or the avenging ghosts of the villagers they had earlier killed.

Your host Robin, a village leader, is a direct descendant of the original Mudmen tribesmen and his story telling skills are second to none. The scene is set and the mountain top scenery is spectacular. The photographic opportunities will be memorable !

Upon descending the mountain you will witness some more cultural performances including the Mokomoko Victory Dance unfolds as a grand spectacle, featuring participants wearing intimidating masks and distinctive penis gourds. Delve into the history and symbolism behind this captivating dance, as performers celebrate their triumphs with a blend of traditional movements and vibrant costumes. Experience the poignant Widowism performance, a cultural expression of how widows used to dress and behave in the old days. Gain a deeper understanding of the traditions surrounding mourning and the unique way in which the Asaro people honor their departed loved ones through this evocative and educational presentation.

Explore the ancient tradition of mask-making with the Korokuvo Masked Tribe. Learn about the historical significance of these masks, used to hide faces during battles. Marvel at the intricate and sometimes frightening designs that have been passed down through generations, reflecting the tribe’s rich cultural heritage. Later in the morning to the accompaniment of traditional Bamboo Flute music you will observe traditional cooking demonstrations. The melodic sounds are performed by the music men from Gimisave village on the other side of Mt. Gurupoka.

Traditional cooking demonstrations where meats are prepared in the method of cooking known as Mumu, regarded as the national dish of Papua New Guinea. It is usually composed of pork or chicken, sweet potato, taro, plantains, with leafy vegetables. Mumu is an example of a balanced dish composed of the two bases, crops (including starch) and meat. The dish is named after the earth oven used to cook it and you will enjoy it to eat for Dinner.

Further indulge your taste buds in the age-old cooking method of traditional bamboo cooking. Observe and assist as pork, beef or chicken along with and local greens and herbs are expertly prepared in bamboo wood over a campfire, providing a sensory experience that connects you with the culinary heritage of the Highlands in Papua New Guinea. 

Pacific Gardens Hotel  or Emmanuel Lodge - Goroka                    B , L , D
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Day 3 – Goroka Show Spectacular - Sunday 20th Sept. 2026

Depart from Brisbane Airport at 10.40 am arriving at Jacksons Airport, Port Moresby at 1.50 pm on Air Niugini flight or arrive on the Qantas flight at 12.20 pm.  Upon arrival you transit to the Domestic terminal for the Air Niugini flight to Goroka departing at 3.50 pm and arriving in Goroka at 4.55 pm. Upon arrival we transit to comfortable accommodation to dine and rest before the commencement of cultural adventure to observe some of the rarest and authentic experiences a global traveller could wish for.

Pacific Gardens Hotel  or Emmanuel Lodge - Goroka                    B , L , D
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We attend day two of the iconic Goroka Cultural Show including the pre-show costuming preparations. Papua New Guinea’s premier cultural event, the Goroka Show, is the longest running annual cultural festival in Papua New Guinea . More than 100 tribes participate in the event performing extraordinary displays of 'sing-sings' - traditional songs, dances and ritual performances.

The staging of the Goroka Show began in 1957 and was first introduced and organised by Australian patrol officers known locally as 'kiaps'. Kiaps from each district built round houses typical of their districts where they displayed the various and unique cultures of the people living there. The kiaps brought in 'sing-sing' groups from surrounding areas. It created an entertaining weekend for everyone, and still does 60 years later. The “Sing Sing” enables a limited number of Western tourists to experience up close, the colour, movement and music performed by the largest gathering of diverse tribes in the South Pacific. 

We visit a coffee plantation to view a coffee processing mill and  enjoy fruit wine tasting. You will be taken through the growing as well as the factory process from factory door to preparing the green bean ready for export. This enterprise is assisting in improving Papua New Guinea’s declining coffee production, including supplying seedlings by the thousands, as well as increasing the quality of its product. Coffee is Papua New Guinea's second largest agricultural export, employing tens of thousands of people. We will view a tea plantation and visit a local village where we observe horticultural activities and also eat sumptuously tasty foods prepared by traditional methods in a beautiful panoramic setting. Your camera clicking finger will earn a rest, having recorded some of the most memorable days of your global travels.​

Pacific Gardens Hotel or Emmanuel Lodge - Goroka                    B , L , D
Day 4 – Kumul Lodge, Mt Hagen - Monday 21st Sept. 2026
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Today we travel overland by private bus to Mt Hagen on the picturesque Highlands Highway. Sometimes known as the Okuk Highway, it is the main land highway in Papua New Guinea. It connects several major cities and is vital for the movement of people and goods between the populous Highlands region and the coast. Small roadside markets dot the highway between Goroka and Mt Hagen in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea. The scenic views are spectacular and you get to observe kilometre after kilometre of aspects of everyday highland life through your bus window and of course many smiling faces and shouted greetings!

 We will visit the 9,500 year old Kuk Early Agricultural Site that was formally accepted onto the World Heritage List in 2008. We stay in the globally renowned Kumul Lodge high above Mt Hagen city and regarded as the best birdwatching lodge in Papua New Guinea. Here we observe Birds of Paradise in close proximity to the dining area and view over 100 varieties of exquisite miniature orchids in the surrounding gardens.

Kumul Lodge – Mt Hagen or similar                                                        B , L , D 

Day 5 – Lake Kutubu - "The Island in The Clouds" Tues 22nd Sept. 2026

Following an early breakfast we depart from theb Lodge for Lake Kutubu in the Southern Highlands. Upon arrival on the shores of Lake Kutubu we then travel in motorised dugout canoe to the magnificently elevated lodge located like an “Island in the Clouds” in the middle of Lake Kutubu. Up here on the southeastern edge of the Southern Highlands of Papua New Guinea in a province more often in the headlines for violent and destructive tribal conflicts, landowner disputes over mining and political shenanigans, something beautiful and completely in harmony with nature is going on. Flynn’s Tours visit to Lake Kutubu will enable you to experience a serene and tranquil world like none other. Perched like an eagle’s eyrie is the under utilised Lodge, a collection of well built and comfortable standalone one room lodges with their own viewing verandah and bathrooms. At their centre is a building housing the dining area from where, much like a diving platform, you can view the 20 kilometre length of the stunning Lake Kutubu, its surrounding jungle fringed shoreline and the daily comings and goings of its human inhabitants in their large canoes hewn out of the local timbers. Observe activities carried out each day or season that have not changed over millennia, usually accompanied by the sound of songs that drift into the heavens from where you are mesmerised. There is no better time to visit this “Island in the Clouds” as when the Kutubu Kundu and Digaso festival is in full swing.  

A well appointed Lodge - Lake Kutubu - Southern Highlands                       B , L , D 
Day 6 – Lake Kutubu Kundu & Digaso Festival - Wed. 23rd Sept. 2026
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Following an early breakfast travel we travel in private Landcruisers to Daga Village for Kutubu Kundu and Digaso Festival. For the next few days we will experience the remote region’s unique culture where over 40 villages participate in the “sing sing” group performances, sago making, digaso oil extraction, kundu drumming and rattle shaking demonstrations. Tapa cloth beatings, mat weaving, bilum, traditional comb, basket making and kutubu plate carving  are all displayed in and around the village.  The Kutubu Kundu and Digaso Festival celebrates a number of neighbouring indigenous cultures who come together to celebrate the importance of the Kundu drum and the trade of the Digaso oil in the traditional culture of the Kutubu people. The festival plays a vital role in safeguarding traditional practices and the diverse biodiversity of the Lake Kutubu region. The sing-sing is a spectacular show where glistening, warrior-like men dress up in their finest: pig-tail aprons; cummerbands woven from vines; cassowary quill, pig tusk and hornbill beak necklaces; and yellow and red face paint, all topped with wigs and headdresses decorated with splendid bird of paradise plumes and forest flowers. The men dance simply, in a rotating line-up, making an eerie, squeaking cry: a call on their ancestors to mediate and somehow help them experience salvation on earth which is understood as an abundant life endowed by resources from their natural environment. The ancient practice of ritual dance is an integral part of the religious and cultural customs associated with the natural resources of their environment.

We return to the eco- lodge accommodation in the middle of Lake Kutubu.

A well appointed  Lodge - Lake Kutubu - Southern Highlands                    B , L , D
Day 7 – Lake Kutubu Kundu & Digaso Festival - Thurs. 24th Sept. 2026

This morning we will go for an early paddle in the lake at the base of the lodge and experience the tranquility that is derived from the lake and its surrounding jungle. Following breakfast we travel to Daga Village for the second day of the Kutubu Kundu and Digaso Festival. The people of Lake Kutubu in Papua New Guinea offer an unique opportunity to examine and appreciate the role of local people not only in biodiversity conservation but in the promotion of their cultural heritage as well. Following some enormously interesting days at the festival we return to eco-lodge accommodation in the middle of Lake Kutubu for a well earned rest.​

Tubo Lodge - Lake Kutubu - Southern Highlands                                      B , L , D
Day 8 – Lake Kutubu Canoe Races - Friday 25th Sept. 2026

This morning the seven main lakeside villages participate in canoe races and other demonstrations of cultural life on the lake dwellers including the dragging to the lake’s foreshore of newly built canoes from the surrounding jungle where the tree from which the canoe is hewn has been originally felled. It is quite a task, performed with ceremonial vigour.

The Foi inhabit the Mubi River Valley and the shores of Lake Kutubu on the fringe of the southern highlands in Papua New Guinea. Lake Kutubu is home to 13 endemic fish species, making it the most unusual lake habitat in the Guinea - Australia region.This morning the seven main lakeside villages participate in canoe races and other demonstrations of cultural life on the lake dwellers including the dragging to the lake’s foreshore of newly built canoes from the surrounding jungle where the tree from which the canoe is hewn has been originally felled. It is quite a task, performed with ceremonial vigour.

The Foi inhabit the Mubi River Valley and the shores of Lake Kutubu on the fringe of the southern highlands in Papua New Guinea. Lake Kutubu is home to 13 endemic fish species, making it the most unusual lake habitat in the Guinea - Australia region.

During our stay at Lake Kutubu we will have visited the Skull Cave and take a canoe visit to Yobo Village and Long House with “talk talk” with village elders. The “hausman” or long houses are reserved only for the men and are thought to be one of the longest traditional thatched huts in the world. The women and children live in smaller houses. The long houses, typically built on the top of ridges for defensive purposes, are big constructions, around 50 meters long and 7 meters wide, erected 1.5 metres off the ground and have fireplaces on each side of a central corridor.

The Lake Kutubu area experienced a number of deaths, and houses and gardens were destroyed during the 7.5 magnitude earthquake that struck the Southern Highlands in February 2018. It was a disaster for the more than 40 villages that participate in the Kutubu Kundu and Digaso Festival and it has been inspirational to observe how these resilient people have bounced back to normality.

Following the Canoe Racing demonstration we travel back to Mt Hagen by private Landcruiser transport.

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Day 9 – Return to Port Moresby & Fly to Rabaul, ENB - Sat. 26th Sept.

Following an early breakfast we transit to Mt Hagen Airport for a flight to Port Moresby and visit the Port Moresby Nature Park. Spread over 30 acres the park is home to over 250 native animals and birds along with hundreds of plant species, many of which are rarely seen outside of PNG. The Nature Park has won a number of international awards for its works.  We  transit to Jacksons Airport in the early afternoon to checkin for 3.15 pm flight to Tokua Airport - Kokopo/Rabaul in East New Britain.

Upon arrival at in East New Britain we check-in to our accommodation and enjoy views of the Duke of York Islands and the adjacent volcanoes while eating a delicious evening meal on the "over the water" decking.

Kumul Lodge – Mt Hagen or similar                                                                B , L , D

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Rapopo Plantation Resort -  Kokopo, East New Britain                        B , L , D
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Day 10 –  A Gazelle Peninsula Tour - Sunday 27th Sept. 2026

This morning we embark on our Flynn’s Tours “Gazelle Peninsula Tour” that includes a scenic tour of the Gazelle Peninsula. But firstly we travel along the coconut fringed shoreline coastal road towards Rabaul Town and visit the Raluana Uniting Church to hear the truly uplifting sounds of the churches nationally recognised church choir. Papua New Guinea's church songs vary by denomination, with styles ranging from traditional hymns in English and local languages to contemporary gospel music. They are well worth listening to. Departing the church we pass the intriguing Vulcan volcano , learning of it's abrupt formation during the explosive eruption in the Rabaul Caldera in 1878. It was built from a series of eruptions that occurred after the larger caldera-forming event, creating a cone of basaltic-to-dacitic pyroclastic material on the caldera floor near the western wall. The 1878 eruption built the cone to its current state, and Vulcan, along with the nearby Tavurvur, has had major explosive activity during historical times, including a simultaneous eruption in 1994. 

We will visit the tranquil memorial gardens of the Chinese cemetery where your guide will explain aspects of the historically long association the Chinese have had with East New Britain. We climb around the large barges of the Japanese Imperial forces that are still housed in even larger tunnels hewn into the soft volcanic cliff faces on the shores of Blanche Bay. Take in the panoramic views around the bay that is home to the WW2 Japanese hospital tunnels which we will explore.

We now take the Top Road from Rabaul, stopping briefly at the Catholic church at Rakunai, the resting place of Saint Peter To Rot (pictured on the left hand side of this text). Pope St. John Paul II declared Peter To Rot Blessed, in 1995, as the first Martyr of Papua New Guinea, as a new figure of holiness as a layman a husband, father, teacher, and catechist. Pope Francis approved his canonization on March 31, 2025, and he was canonized on 19th October 2025 by Pope Leo XIV and be formally recognised as the first saint from Papua New Guinea. The Japanese invasion of the island in 1942 posed a significant threat to the New Guinea Church. To Rot, entrusted with continuing the work of a departing missionary, defied Japanese attempts to undermine Church teachings, particularly regarding marriage. Despite the risk, he organized secret religious gatherings and resisted the re-introduction of legal polygamy by the Japanese, staunchly defending monogamy. His steadfastness led to his arrest and eventual martyrdom in July 1945, underscoring his commitment to the faith and the sanctity of Christian marriage.

You will observe cocoa, copra and palm oil cultivation undertaken in the rich volcanic soil, noting the area’s significant contribution to the national economy. Kokopo, named Herbertshohe in the earliest colonial period, was from 1884 to 1910 the capital of the German New Guinea colonial empire. You will visit the historic German cemetery, the cathedral at Vunapope Catholic mission and the Kokopo Lookout. View the beachside landing site at Kabakaul from where Australian military forces advanced in 1914 to capture the German wireless station at Bita Paka. This battle was Australia’s first major military engagement of the First World War. we visit Bita Paka War Cemetary , now the resting place of over one thousand Australian and Allied soldiers who met their fate during World War 2, when “Fortress Rabaul” became the South Pacific headquarters and staging post for the Japanese Imperial Forces. It was occupied by 100,000 Japanese soldiers. 

We will enjoy a light lunch at the Gazelle Hotel, enjoy stunning views and stand on “Emma’s Steps” and hear stories about the achievements and exploits of Queen Emma Coe.

Today we will have the customary shell money concept explained in detail with an opportunity to make your own string of shell money. Early missionaries and travellers to New Britain found it to be the only area in the Pacific region they had come across where the locals had a true money currency of a standard value. The Europeans were intrigued by the local monetary system and the way in which Tambu was intricately woven into the very texture of social life. It still plays its role in Tolai society today, maintaining its cultural significance, particularly as part of the bride price or gift giving to the father of the would be bride. It is exchanged to mark births, marriages and deaths. The standard unit of currency is the 'pokono' or fathom (a grown man's arm span). Be fascinated by stories from the Tubuan Society of the local Tolai people who have strict laws and taboos. Learn of the Ingiet stone carvings associated with the powerful Ingiet sorcerers and the secret men’s society, outlawed by the German administration in 1905.

Before dinner enjoy a swim and snorkel the resorts house reef which is home to many varied species of coral and marine life.

Rapopo Plantation Resort -  Kokopo, East New Britain                      B,  L ,  D
Day 11 – Volcano Climb & Ramble Around Roaring Rabaul - Monday 

Be ready to enjoy spectacular views at sunrise on an early morning climb of the active volcano, Mt Tavurvur. While the climb is challenging, it’s not beyond most people’s capability to reach the top. Flynn’s Tours has had an octogenarian complete the ascent (see Bruce in the lead in the picture to the left of this text ). You can take in further views of Rabaul’s picturesque harbour and its six volcanoes from the Vulcanological Observatory on Tunnel Hill. An informative talk delivered by an onsite vulcanologist will enlighten you of the workings of volcanoes, lava, magma and related geological, geophysical and geochemical phenomena.  You will tour the area of current volcano activity and clamber around Mount Tavurvur. See the hot springs, sulphurous steam points and the megapode egg hunters who burrow metres into the black sand emerging with the prized eggs. Megapodes do not incubate their eggs with their body heat as other birds do, but bury them. Their eggs are unique in having a large yolk, making up 50-70% of the egg weight. The birds here are burrow-nesters which use geothermal heat. Some species vary their incubation strategy, such as building mounds to bury them in, depending on the local environment. We travel around the remains of old Rabaul town (including its airport) which resembles a lunar landscape, following its burial in volcanic ash during the dramatic eruptions of 1994. Prior to the burial of Rabaul town it was revered as “the Pearl of the South Pacific”. East New Britain’s commercial hub has been re-established in a modernised Kokopo over the past 30 years. Rabaul was also badly damaged during an earlier eruption on 6 June 1937, five years before the occupation by Japanese military. We visit Matupit Island whose people and settlement survived the worst of the 1994 volcanic eruption despite their location immediately beneath it. Visit old Rabaul Township and see the resulting destruction caused by the 1994 volcanic explosions. Discover the pre-European settlement history and recent colonial occupations by German, Japanese and Australian administrations at the New Guinea Club and Rabaul Historical Display. Explore the Japanese military command bunker of Admiral Yamamoto where maps of the surrounding area are etched into the bunkers ceiling at head height. 

The coastal drive returning to Kokopo from Rabaul, skirting around Blanche Bay in East New Britain offers breathtaking tropical scenery. Towering volcanoes, including Tavurvur with it's dramatic smoke-tipped peak and Vulcan, frame the landscape. The deep blue waters of the bay shimmer beside black-sand beaches formed by volcanic ash, while lush green vegetation carpets the hillsides. Along the route, remnants of World War II relics, small villages, and coconut plantations add cultural and historical depth. This one of Papua New Guinea’s most scenic and memorable coastal journeys.

Closer to Kokopo we visit the Agmark cocoa fermentary where the method of processing cocoa for export to the world’s chocolate makers is explained by the fermentary management. We pop into  the Kokopo Museum which houses an impressive range of war relics along with an informative display of colonial, military and natural history.  We will take a tour of the Kokopo Market and it's enormous variety of local fruits, vegetables and  crafted products that assist homemakers to care for their families. The market is regarded as one of the most impressive in PNG.​

Before dinner enjoy a swim and snorkel the resorts house reef which is home to many varied species of coral and marine life.

Rapopo Plantation Resort -  Kokopo, East New Britain               B , L , D 
Day 12 – A Taste of Life in the Pearls of the Pacific - Tuesday 29th Sept.

This morning we travel by boat across the St. Georges Channel to the Duke of York Islands and their picturesque lagoons. This idyllic paradise is made up of a dozen or so islands set among a mesmerizingly, forever changing backdrop of colourful tropical landscapes. The natural beauty is interspersed with scenes of village life as the happy villagers go about living beside the tranquil waters they share with an abundance of marine life.

We will visit Kabakon “the garden” Island and the aclaimed " Pang Pang Paradise " Island. The natural beauty is interspersed with the scenes of happy villagers on Karrawara Island who go about living beside the tranquil waters they share with an abundance of marine life. Be enthralled with the playful dolphins and mysterious dugongs.

In 1902, the 25-year-old German health reformer, August Engelhardt, who practiced sun worship and a strict coconut diet, retreated from Bavarian university life to Kabakon Island in the Duke of York Islands, which he purchased from his mother country with an inheritance. The first few years were idyllic. Engelhardt established a coconut plantation and called his followers to join him in this brave new world. They called themselves Sonnenorden and practised sun worship and nudity and lived off coconuts. But it didn’t last. Learn out why! 

We make our way from the islands by boat to the mainland at Kokopo Enjoying lunch and a freshen

​The welcoming host of Corey’s Eco Sea Lodge will ensure that you lunch on plentiful amounts of delicious and freshly harvested fruit, vegetables and fish. For lunch today we will taste Aigir, a traditional cuisine of the Tolai people of East New Britain Province in Papua New Guinea. It's been a main dish for generations of the Tolai people and is prepared on special occasions and family gatherings. The method of cooking Aigir which  is made by heating hot stones to boil liquid coconut and pure coconut will be demonstrated. The dish is widely accepted as one of the finest dishes. Aigir works by heating the liquid with hot stones. To make Tolai aigir, you peel kaukau and bananas, cut them in half, and add aibika, salt, sliced onion, and tomatoes to heated coconut oil. Aigir is consumed with meats prepared in the traditional method of cooking known as Mumu which is regarded as the national dish of Papua New Guinea. It is composed of pork or chicken, sweet potato, taro, plantains, with leafy vegetables. Mumu is an example of a balanced dish composed of the two bases, crops (including starch) and meat. The dish is named after the earth oven used to cook it and its cooking will also be demonstrated.

Later in tghe afternoon we make our way from the islands by boat back to the mainland resort to your accommodation to rest for the night and enjoy dinner.

Rapopo Plantation Resort -  Kokopo, East New Britain               B , L , D 
Day 13 – Highlights of Port Moresby  - Wednesday 30th Sept.

This morning  we fly on on an early Air Niugini flight departing Tokua Airport to arrive in  Port Moresby for an early hotel check-in and a hearty breakfast following our very early start for the day. Today we enjoy a range of activities in the National Capital.

One of the activities while in Port Moresby will be visiting the Papua New Guinea National Museum and Art Gallery which is the “spiritual house” for the rich natural, cultural and contemporary heritage of the country. The museum draws on well over 30,000 anthropological collections, more than 25,000 archaeological collections, more than 18,000 natural science collections, more than 20,000 war relics and more than 7000 contemporary art collections for its displays. We take a brief viewing of the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea, a building that blends old and new and which combines modern architecture with ancient design.

​We will also drive from Port Moresby viewing the stunning scenery at the Varirata National Park’s viewing point as well as exploring it's forests on the lookout for Birds of Paradise. We enjoy beautiful views of the Laloki River as we drive further  up to the Sogeri Plateau and the foothills of the Owen Stanley Ranges  to the start of the Kokoda Track at Ower's Corner. On the return journey we visit the Bomana War Cemetery where those who died in the fighting in Papua New Guinea are buried, their graves brought in by the Australian Army Graves Service from burial grounds in the areas where the fighting had taken place. 

Sanctuary Hotel Resort or similar   -          B , L , D
Day 14 – Port Moresby  to Home Destination  -  Thursday 1st Oct. 2026

Today you fly home. Air Niugini flights usually depart for Brisbane daily, Cairns on most days,  Sydney, Singapore & Manila as scheduled.  Passengers flying to Brisbane can depart from Jackson's Airport in Port Moresby on a Qantas flight at 1.35 pm. A range of carriers provide flights to other international destinations. Be assured that the standard cost Port Moresby to Brisbane is under AUD400 for either Air Niugini and Qantas one way. Flying to Cairns is usually cheaper.

A range of carriers provide flights to other international destinations.       

 

 Breakfast provided​

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Did you know?

The densely populated Highlands region of mainland Papua New Guinea was “discovered” as recently as the 1930’s by Australian gold prospectors, Mick Leahy and Michael Dwyer. Melanesians have occupied the highland interior of New Guinea Island probably for more than 30,000 years, developing advanced plant cultivation and irrigation technologies at 1,500 metres above sea level, possibly 10,000 years ago, establishing themselves amongst the world’s earliest agriculturists. The oldest evidence for this is in the Kuk Swamp area, where planting, digging and staking of plants, and possibly drainage have been used to cultivate taro, banana, sago and yam.

 

The cultural practices of the people of Lake Kutubu result in their wise use of natural resources. They illustrate on a daily basis the importance that traditional methods and cultural expressions play in conserving the lake and it’s surrounding forest. 

The Kutubu Kundu and Digaso Festival celebrates the Kutubu peoples continuing connection with their beautiful surrounds.

The people of Lake Kutubu in Papua New Guinea offers an unique opportunity to examine and appreciate the role of local people not only in biodiversity conservation but in the promotion of their cultural heritage as well. The Lake Kutubu people are indigenous and on account of the retention of much of their traditional culture, retain close ties to their ancestral land and the abundant biological diversity found therein.

 

Made throughout the Melanesian Islands tapa is a traditional cloth made from the inner bark of suitable trees like paper mulberry or breadfruit trees. In Papua New Guinea it is commonly associated with the Maisin people in the Oro Province. This bark cloth is also made by the Fasu and Foi people in the Lake Kutubu area. They utilize larger sheets as undecorated rain capes, predominately worn by women in times of bad weather, as well as for traditional dances, ceremonies and in times of mourning. The inner bark layer is peeled from the trunks of the harvested trees and alternately soaked in water and beaten to gradually produce a thin sheet. Strips of tapa are often overlaid crosswise and beaten again to produce larger and stronger pieces of blank cloth to suit particular end uses and designs. Tapa beating is carried out using a hardwood or stone tool to flatten the fibres against a smooth log or similar. The locals, more particularly the women wear costumes of tapa cloth throughout the “sing sing”. 

 

Sago is extracted from Metroxylon Palms by splitting the stem lengthwise and removing the pith which is then crushed and kneaded to release the starch before being washed and strained to extract the starch from the fibrous residue. The raw starch is suspended in water and then collected in a settling container.

 

Digaso oil is rubbed on the skin to give traditional dancers a shiny black look. It comes from the Digaso tree found growing among sago palms. The pinkish-white heartwood produces abundant clear exudes which react with oxygen to form black oil. The Kutubuans oil is stored in long bamboos, kept in the longhouses and traded for modern money, traditional shell money and pigs. Traditionally the oil was traded with the Huli people for pigs, Nipa people for stone axes and the Enga people for salt. In the past it was also used to protect against lice and heal sores.

 

The Lake Kutubu Wildlife Management Area supports a rich and varied bird community. Surveys conducted to date have recorded nearly one-third of all bird species resident or regularly occurring in  the New Guinea region. The high species richness is attributable to the presence of multiple habitats, including a variety of dryland forest, open-water wetland and swamp vegetation types, spanning an elevational range of nearly 600 m within a small geographic area.

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The Foi and Fasu people eat bamboo shoots from the gardens and use the bamboo tubes for carrying water, cooking sago and as pots for boiling other foods such as vegetables.

They also tend small, often fenced, tobacco gardens. Clearing garden land is primarily men's work while planting and weeding are done by both men and women. Longhouses are surrounded by small gardens, while larger gardens are made in the bush and along the banks of rivers. Various plants are mixed together in food gardens.Tree crops in the Kutubu area include pandanus, breadfruit, tulip and coconuts. The trees are planted in gardens as well as near villages. The tulip trees, in particular, are planted in gardens but unlike other places in New Guinea where people eat its leaves, in the Kutubu area, it is grown primarily for its bark which is used to make capes and twine for string bags (bilum). Foi and Fasu people hunt wild pigs and cassowaries in heavily forested mountains. They also hunt small bats in limestone caves. The lake is the main focus for fishing activities and usually available along the edges of streams and along the rivers are crayfish, crabs and large fish such as barramundi.

Pigs are of extremely high value anywhere in Papua New Guinea including the Kutubu lake area where they are kept in villages. They sleep by the women's houses and are given special attention and food such as chewed, cooked sago mashed with greens. When grown, they figure prominently as bridewealth given by the groom's family and in other ceremonies.

 

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In 1902, the 25-year-old German health reformer, August Engelhardt, who practiced sun worship and a strict coconut diet, retreated from Bavarian university life to Kabakon Island in the Duke of York Islands, which he purchased from his mother country with an inheritance. The first few years were idyllic. Engelhardt established a coconut plantation and called his followers to join him in this brave new world. They called themselves Sonnenorden and practised sun worship and nudity and lived off coconuts. But it didn’t last. The alien living conditions took their toll and several died. Others turned their back on him. Engelhardt, known by the local islanders as Mr Coconut, was eventually left alone, gripped by malaria and went insane. He died on the island aged 46 in 1919.

 

The Tubuan Society of the local Tolai people who have strict laws and taboos.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Learn of the Ingiet stone carvings associated with the powerful Ingiet sorcerers and the secret men’s society, outlawed by the German administration in 1905. Early missionaries and travellers to New Britain found it to be the only area in the Pacific region they had come across where the locals had a true money currency of a standard value. The Europeans were intrigued by the local monetary system and the way in which Tambu was intricately woven into the very texture of social life. It still plays its role in Tolai society today, maintaining its cultural significance, particularly as part of the bride price or gift giving to the father of the would be bride.

 

The Rabaul Caldera was created about 1400 years ago with an explosion which erupted 11 cubic kilometres of rock. This massive outpouring of gas, lava, rocks and ash produced the largest volcanic dry fog in recorded history. A mysterious cloud that blocked sunlight for 12 to 18 months over Europe, China and the Middle East in 536 AD is linked to this mighty eruption.

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Queen Emma Coe was a Polynesian Princess and daughter of an American sailor and Samoan mother who in the late 19th century brought commerce to East New Britain, through her savvy business sense and huge land holdings, upon which she grew an abundance of copra and cocoa. The steps are 140 years old, built in 1882 to grace Queen Emma’s famous bungalow Gunantambu. They were climbed by Governors, Ambassadors and Officers representing German Kaiser, American President and kings of England, France and other European nations along with assorted bishops and world-renowned scientists, explorers, anthropologists and adventurers. Gunantambu gatherings were famous throughout the South Seas.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Marquis de Ray, whose real name was Charles Guillain, was a French adventurer who attempted to establish a colony in the New Ireland Province of Papua New Guinea in the late 19th century.

Born in France in 1825, de Ray harbored ambitions of founding a utopian settlement in the Pacific.In 1878, de Ray acquired a large tract of land in New Ireland, which he named "Franceville." He proclaimed himself the Marquis de Ray and began recruiting French settlers to join his colony. Promising fertile land and a prosperous future, de Ray managed to attract around 200 individuals to embark on this venture.

However, the expedition turned into a disaster. The settlers faced numerous hardships, including disease, scarcity of resources, and conflicts with local indigenous populations. The dream of a flourishing French colony quickly crumbled, and de Ray's leadership was called into question.

As conditions worsened, some settlers managed to escape the island, and others perished. Eventually, de Ray was arrested and brought back to France to face charges of fraud and deception. He was sentenced to imprisonment and died in 1895.The ill-fated endeavor of the Marquis de Ray in New Ireland Province serves as a cautionary tale of colonial ambitions gone awry. It highlights the challenges and complexities involved in establishing new settlements in unfamiliar territories, particularly when undertaken without adequate planning, resources, and respect for the local population

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