EM207 – GOROKA SHOW AND KALAM CULTURAL FESTIVAL. 12 – 22 SEPTEMBER 2013
10 nights Goroka, Mt Hagen, Simbai, Madang (escorted smal group tour minimum 6, maximum 8 people)
The Goroka Show is partly an agricultural show and partly a highlands sing-sing. Since colonial days the peopleof the eastern highlands have come together once a year to display samples of their best crops and livestockto compete for prizes, and to show off their most colourful and energetic dance traditions. The pride of eachtribe is vested in its dancing groups which vie for attention and prominence on the dance ground – often thereare several groups performing at once in different parts of the arena. Sparks fly occasionally on the field asjealousy and competition fuel conflict between tribal groups. At the end of the Show, judges award prizes tothe best dancing groups: cash awards have now taken the place of pigs and brides.
The Kalam Culture Festival is a local festival attended by only a few privileged outsiders. Once a year thepeople of the Kalam tribe around Simbai in the highlands come together to resolve disputes, pay bride priceand other compensation payments (usually in the form of pigs), pierce the nose septum of pubescent boys toinitiate them into manhood, and feast and celebrate together the traditions of their tribe. Goroka Show Package
10 Nights’ accommodation, most meals, all airfares
Twin Share Per Person Single Supplement
Australia – PNG International and domestic Airfares• Port Moresby – airport meet and greet• Port Moresby - tour information kit including welcome gift, souvenir polo shirt, maps, destination
• Port Moresby - scheduled domestic flight to Goroka• Goroka – airport meet and greet, transfer to hotel• Goroka - 3 nights twin-share 2-star budget accommodation with shared bathroom, includes light
breakfast on site and buffet dinner at nearby hotel (food only)
• Goroka - half day tour of Goroka town with fruit and bottled water• Goroka - 2 x half day escorted excursions to the Goroka Show with entry pass, fruit and bottled water• Goroka - half day excursion to Akameku vil age (or similar) with local style lunch and bottled water• Goroka - half day excursion to Daulo Pass moss forest (or similar) with packed lunch and bottled water• Goroka - road transfer to Mt Hagen with fruit and bottled water• Mt Hagen - 2 nights 4 star twin share accommodation at Highlander Hotel (premier room, room only)• Mt Hagen - ful -day vil age and nature tour including lunch• Mt Hagen - charter flight from Mt Hagen to Simbai (PAC750 or Cessna C208 Grand Caravan)• Simbai - 3 days vil age culture tours and attendance at the Kalam Culture Festival, Simbai including all
• Simbai - 3 nights 1-star twin-share accommodation at Kalam Guest House, Simbai including local style
• Simbai - charter flight from Simbai to Madang (Cessna 206)• Madang – airport meet and greet, transfer to hotel
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EM207 – GOROKA SHOW AND KALAM CULTURAL FESTIVAL. 12 – 22 SEPTEMBER 2013
• Madang – 1 night 3.5 star accommodation at Coastwatchers Hotel (premier room, room only)• Madang – 1 night 3,5 star accommodation at Jais Aben Resort (deluxe room, room only)• Madang – half day town and vil age tour• Madang – ful day Alexishafen and Rempi Lagoon tour including local style lunch• Madang – scheduled domestic flight to Port Moresby• Port Moresby - ad hoc shopping or sightseeing on last day of tour, subject to flight departure time• Port Moresby - departure check-in assistance and farewel at airport• Al fees and gratuities for local vil ages, guides and helpers throughout the tour• Al hotel transfers throughout the tour• Tour leader throughout the tour• First aid kit and mobile satel ite phone carried by tour leader• Daily reconfirmation of flights and arrangements coordinated by tour operator’s Port Moresby office• 24 hour assistance from tour operator’s Port Moresby office
• meals, bar drinks and bottled water at hotel• tips (not expected, and only appropriate for exceptional service)• souvenirs and items of a personal nature• visa fees and visa assistance• airline excess baggage charges (the free allowance on Air Niugini is 20kg + 5 kg)• Personal items. Bring your own personal medications and first aid kit, personal hygiene requirements,
brimmed hat or cap, “amphibious footwear” (sandals or quick-dry canvas shoes), insect repel ent,sunscreen, battery-operated personal fan. Please note that pressurised aerosol spray cans are notpermitted on domestic flights in PNG – bring pump-action sprays or rol -ons. ITINERARY
Day 1 – Friday 12 Sep AUSTRALIA – PORT MORESBY – GOROKA
On arrival at Port Moresby airport from Singapore or Australia you wil be met by staff
from Ecotourism Melanesia who wil assist you to check in for your connecting flight to
09:30 Air Niugini flight PX960 departs Port Moresby for Goroka (aircraft: Dash 8-400
10:40 You wil be met on arrival in Goroka by your tour escort who has gone ahead to
finalise tour arrangements. Look for somebody holding a sign with your name. The guide
wil drive you 5 minutes to your hotel, assist you to check in and then bring you to the
12:00 Lunch at the Bird of Paradise Hotel with other Ecotourism Melanesia clients joining
the Goroka Show program (pizza and pasta or light buffet).
13:00 We commence a half day group tour of Goroka travel ing by mini coach. First stop
is a drive up to the Mt Kiss lookout from where you wil be able to see most of Goroka
town and the adjacent Asaro Valley, to get your bearings. Next stop is a 30-minute visit
to the JK McCarthy Museum of Highlands Culture which has informative displays of
highlands artefacts, traditional dress and customs, then on to the Goroka handicrafts
market (30 min) where a variety of cultural artefacts and made-for-sale arts and crafts
are displayed for sale including the colourful woven string bags called bil ums. Another
stop wil be made at the Goroka fresh produce market where you wil see a wide range of
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sub-tropical fruit and vegetables for sale by vil agers squatting on the ground or at tables.
Bring a few coins with you to buy some ripe bananas or some of the exotic fruits like
Pomelo (giant grape fruit) or Laulau (bel fruit / Malay apple). If time allows your guide
may also be able to take you to the Niugini Fruit Company at West Goroka where local
wild fruit hand-picked by vil agers is used to produce PNG’s only local jam, hand cooked
in vats over an open fire. Overnight Goroka (2 star budget accommodation – includes
buffet or banquet dinner and continental breakfast).
08:00 We wil transfer by mini bus from our accommodation to the show grounds in time
to settle into our seats before the commencement of the sing-sing performances around
09:00. The tourist enclosure has good views of the performance area and your tourist
pass (provided as part of your tour package) gives you blanket permission to enter the
performance area if you wish to take close-up photographs. Special toilets for tourists are
situated nearby. A number of our guides wil accompany our group today to interpret the
performances for you. Fruit and bottled water is supplied for you at the Show.
13:00 Depart from the Show grounds and head straight for Akameku vil age about 45
minutes’ drive out of town. Akameku is a typical semi-rural highlands vil age with round
huts made of bush materials, smoky cooking fires and pigs wandering around free. At
Akameku a traditional-style mumu lunch is ready you. Meat and vegetables has been
wrapped in banana leaves or stuffed into the nodes of giant bamboo stalks and cooked in
a pit under hot coals or hot stones. The food has taken about 2 hours to slow-cook this
way and when it comes out of the “oven” it has a delightful smoky barbeque flavour. At
Akameku you’l see local people engaged in a variety of daily activities such as market
gardening, harvesting and food preparation, bil um weaving, hunting wild pigs with bows
and arrows, and tending their coffee crops. Organic coffee grown on smallholder blocks
is the major cash crop in the highlands. Also at Akameku you have the option to take a 1
hour round-trip hike through high montane forest (different from the moss forest at
Daulo) to the nearby river and waterfall. This forest is populated by birds and tree
mammals such as cuscus which can sometimes be seen peeping out of their hiding
places, understandably wary of bows and arrows. Mid to late afternoon like this is the
time of day when the raucous Raggiana bird of paradise is most active: the bird is
relatively easy to spot in the trees as it flutters from tree to tree emitting a loud
distinctive cackle. There are known nesting spots along the forest paths near Akameku.
Wild animals including birds of paradise are plentiful in PNG and are not protected by law
but locals at Akameku have preserved the area of forest nearest the vil age for visitors to
17:30 Drop off at your accommodation. Overnight Goroka (2 star budget accommodation
– includes buffet or banquet dinner and continental breakfast).
Second day at the Goroka Show as per yesterday.
13:00 We depart from the Show grounds and drive 1 hour out the Highlands Highway
through the Asaro Valley to the Daulo Pass. A packed lunch is provided to eat on board
the bus. The Daulo Pass is a high altitude biodiversity hotspot where the highway winds
through swirling mists past giant tree ferns and trickling waterfalls. Near the peak of the
pass, we wil leave our vehicle at the road side and some locals, who live a rather cold
existence way up here, wil lead us on a 30 to 60 minute walk through the moss forest.
The forest is populated by flowering trees and tree ferns which form a substrate for the
growth of a wide variety of saprophytic native orchids, green mosses and colourful fungi,
lichens, liverworts and leafy epiphytes. Real “Lord of the Rings” stuff. Local children sel
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EM207 – GOROKA SHOW AND KALAM CULTURAL FESTIVAL. 12 – 22 SEPTEMBER 2013
flowers on the side of the road here.
17:30 Return to accommodation. Overnight Goroka (2 star budget accommodation –
includes buffet or banquet dinner and continental breakfast).
This morning we travel by road to Mt Hagen and check in for two nights at the
Highlander Hotel. The road transfer along the Highlands Highway takes about 6 hours but
the drive is very scenic and is said to be one of the world’s remarkable road journeys. The
first part of the journey is the steady climb overlooking Goroka town and the Asaro
Valley up to the Simbu Province with its precipitous ravines and steep mountainsides
amazingly covered in furrowed gardens with people working away in them… one foot
uphil and one foot downhil to steady themselves. PNG’s highest peak, Mt Wilhelm,
passes us slowly on our right as we snake our way through the Simbu province. After a
coffee and comfort stop at a hotel in the Simbu capital of Kundiawa – (known locally as
“cowboy town” - we’ll explain later) we continue in a westerly direction passing through
the small towns of Minj and Kudjip before descending through the Wahgi Valley tea and
coffee plantations to Mt Hagen. Mt Hagen is PNG’s third largest town after Port Moresby
and Lae. On arrival at the Highlander Hotel we check in and have late lunch at the
poolside bistro (pay as you go). Overnight Highlander Hotel, Mt Hagen (room only)
MT HAGEN (vil age experience and nature tour)
Today we’ll drive about 30 minutes out of town to Moikap where we wil tour a typical
Western Highlands cluster vil age. Further up the road is Paiyagona (Paiya), a dispersed
vil age with a skul house where they keep their ancestors bones. Here we wil also see a
demonstration of Melpa tribe cultural practices such as courting behaviour, wig-making
and tribal initiation. We’ll also meet the chief and his three wives ☺ A short distance
further on from Paiya is Magic Mountain, a peak which got this name because it is said to
look the same no matter from which direction you view it. Up on Magic Mountain we’ll
take a nature walk and local guides wil introduce us to some native botany of the
highlands. Some of the local plants wil be served up as a vegetarian lunch, with a little
chicken on the side for the omnivores among us. Don’t be surprised if you see your plate
laden with strawberries, cantaloupe and other temperate-climate delicacies plucked
fresh from the ground. Just about anything wil grow in the fertile Highlands. On the way
back to Mt Hagen we’ll stop at a bird-watching site where we expect to be able to view
the raucous Raggiana bird of paradise which is active in the late afternoons. Overnight
08:00 We check out from the hotel and transfer to the Mt Hagen airport.
09:00 Our charter flight departs for Simbai, a 45-minute flight north of Mt Hagen. On
arrival at Simbai airstrip we wil be met by local guides with plenty of helpful hands to
carry our bags for the 30 minute walk to the Kalam Guest House, a basic but comfortable
facility built in local style. Today is the preparation day for the Kalam Culture Festival, an
important opportunity for you to observe the vil age people going about preparatory
tasks such as col ecting firewood and leaves for wrapping food in the earth oven,
harvesting food from their gardens (sweet potato, yam, bananas), preparing the food for
cooking, and sorting out their traditional dress which involves cutting fresh flowers,
col ecting fresh bird feathers for decoration, and repairing broken head-dresses. The
traditional head-dresses and helmets worn by the young men at initiation are very
elaborate and require a lot of care. There wil also be opportunities today for walking
through the hamlets around Simbai, visiting the orchid gardens and vegetable gardens,
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EM207 – GOROKA SHOW AND KALAM CULTURAL FESTIVAL. 12 – 22 SEPTEMBER 2013
and inspecting the Kalam tribal culture museum. Simbai government station is the
district headquarters. It is just a remote outpost, not a town. There is a two-man district
office, a primary school, a small trade store, a couple of little churches, and a dozen
prefabricated houses for the small number of provincial government staff, local
missionaries and school teachers. Thirty to sixty minutes walking time from the “station”
are the first Kalam tribal vil ages, constructed of bush materials. More vil ages are located
deeper in the surrounding hil s. The vil age people live subsistence lifestyles: hunting,
gathering and gardening. Apart from a few coffee plots there is very little commercial
agriculture here because there is no vehicular access for transporting crops out.
Overnight Kalam Guest House (twin share - includes all meals). Kalam Guest House is
built in traditional style with bush materials - each room has two beds with rubber
mattresses, pil ow and bed covers, protected by an insect net. The rooms have a table
and chair and somewhere to hang your towel and clothes. Toilets are outdoor pit latrines
and showering involves scooping water over yourself from a drum of rain water in an
Today we attend various activities of the Kalam Culture Festival. During the course of the
day you may float back and forth between the guest house and the festival ground.
Simbai is perfectly safe for you to wander around without an escort although locals wil
be horrified to see you walking around alone (they wil think they have failed in their
hospitality if no one is with you) so don’t be surprised if somebody sidles up and tags
along with you to “guide” you if you strike out on your own. They wil not expect any
payment for showing you around - Simbai is a non-commercial place where culture and
hospitality reign and money is of secondary importance. A light lunch is provided at the
festival venue. The Kalam Culture Festival is held in the third week of September with the
highlight being the initiation of young boys between 12-15 years by nose piercing ("sutim
nus" or shootim-nose). The festival traditionally features pig kil ing, bride price payments,
debt settlement, feasting, dancing and singing. This is not a show put on for tourists
(there are no tourists - yet), it is a genuine cultural phenomenon when all the
surrounding vil age people flow into Simbai station for the occasion. Visitors simply stand
and watch in amazement as initiated Kalam men parade around the station with their
huge head-dresses decorated with bright green beetle exoskeletons. Most of the festival
activities are informal and do not run to a fixed schedule. You wil be free to move
around on your own or with a local guide in tow, mixing freely with the local people
attending the event. There wil be a few other visitors around but not many, probably
less than 20 apart from our group. The day’s festival program wil be a mixture of
organised (or disorganised) and impromptu activities. Dance performances and nose-
piercing ceremonies may be scheduled for particular times (and may or may not occur at
those times!) and bride price and compensation payments may take place without
notice. Bear in mind that the festival is a local cultural phenomenon that we have the
privilege to observe, and is not staged for our benefit so we cannot expect the program
to run with our Western concept of punctuality. And the fact that this festival is a bona
fide cultural event is, of course, the reason why we have come to witness it! The first
activity of the festival on the Thursday morning wil be the pig kil ing ritual which is part
of the initiation of boys to become men. The ceremony involves clubbing a number of
pigs to death and these are later butchered and cooked in the earth oven. This is not a
sight for the squeamish so we suggest you give it a miss if you think you might find it
disturbing or if it might put you off your pork chops. The pigs’ heads are cooked
separately from the other meat overnight and taken out of the earth oven the next day –
this is part of the initiation ritual. Nose-piercing of initiates also takes place today – a
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sharp stick or cassowary quil is used to pierce the septum of the nose to enable a nose
piece or nose ornament to be worn. In the evening we join the locals for a traditional
feast. This wil include a range of local vegetables stewed in coconut milk or roasted in
banana leaves under hot stones in a shallow pit in the ground (this is cal ed a "mumu").
You may also be offered a meat dish which may be locally raised chicken or game meat
hunted from the forest (kangaroo, cassowary or possum). Your hosts wil not be offended
if you sample only those foods that appeal to you. There wil also be plenty of fruit such
as bananas, pineapples and oranges. At night there wil be a bonfire with traditional story
tel ing where the elders wil remind the younger generation of their heritage. Overnight
Kalam Guest House (twin share - includes all meals).
Second day at the Kalam Culture Festival. Be prepared for some of yesterday’s activities
to be deferred til today, or vice- versa (flexible program), and be prepared for rain to
wash out the program for a few hours at a time. This is when we wil sit in the guest
house and have hot tea and scones and chat to the locals while waiting for the rain to
clear and the festival program to continue. By this time the initially shy locals wil have
warmed up to our presence and wil begin inviting us individually or in twos and threes to
accompany them to their houses around the “station” or nearby vil ages. You are
welcome to “disappear” with locals for individualised looking around – grateful if you
could let our local tour guide know when and with whom you are going so that we can
keep track of everybody. Overnight Kalam Guest House, Simbai (twin share, includes all
SIMBAI / MADANG (half day town and vil age tour)
This morning we wil fly by charter aircraft from Simbai to Madang. On arrival in Madang
we wil check in at our hotel in time for late lunch (pay as you go). After lunch at the hotel
we offer a tour of Madang town including the fresh food and handicraft markets, war
memorials and lighthouse and a stop at Hobe, a delightful little vil age on the edge of the
rainforest, with time for a forest walk and a performance of the “butterfly dance” by the
vil age kids. Overnight Coastwatchers Hotel, Madang (twin-share premier room, room
08:00 Check out of the Coastwatchers Hotel and load your luggage onto the tour vehicle.
(An earlier start is available if you prefer). Your guide wil drive you north out of town
past the airport, and the first stop wil be a side trip up Nobnob ridge to the Nobnob
lookout which offers panoramic views of the Madang coastline: Madang town and
lagoon to the south east and Karkar Island to the north. Back on the main road, turn off
to the right this time and drive through a coconut plantation fil ed with parrots to get to
Nagada Inlet, the site of Jais Aben Resort where you wil be staying tonight. Check in to
your room and leave your luggage. Most of tomorrow wil be set aside for you to enjoy
the little beach and warm waters of the Nagada Inlet. From Jais Aben our guide wil drive
you further out the North Coast road to Madang’s only satel ite township, Alexishafen,
Spend some time looking around the old German catholic mission at Alexishafen (see
destination notes below) then continue another 30 minutes’ drive along the north coast
road to Rempi Lagoon. The picturesque shallow lagoon is protected by a line of tiny
islands running parallel to the beach. Much of the Pearce Brosnan film Robinson Crusoe
was shot here at Rempi Lagoon and in the adjacent rainforest on shore. On arrival at
Rempi vil age some locals wil paddle you around the lagoon and out to the little islands
in a native dugout canoe and you can get off on one of the islands and take a walk right
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EM207 – GOROKA SHOW AND KALAM CULTURAL FESTIVAL. 12 – 22 SEPTEMBER 2013
around in just a few minutes then paddle back to shore again. On one of the islands you
can run along the same beach where Pearce Brosnan and Man Friday chased crabs in the
movie. Don’t hesitate to ask for your turn with the paddle, it’s great fun paddling even if
you go around in circles ☺ The local dugout canoes have stabilising outrigger arms which
prevent them from tipping over. And wherever you see a flash of bril iant colours in the
water you can jump out with a mask and flippers for a spot of reef snorkel ing. There is
good new coral growth in the lagoon. Back at Rempi vil age a local style seafood lunch is
prepared for you, some fish barbequed under hot stones or coals and some local
vegetables cooked with coconut and seafood in traditional clay pots. By mid-afternoon,
you wil say farewel to the lagoon and head inland 10 minutes’ drive to the Sempi
rainforest. Here your guide wil lead you on a 90 minute jungle hike with stops at: - the
creek where the Robinson Crusoe jungle camp scenes were filmed - the Sempi bat cave
(walk in with flashlights and see thousands of bats, stalactites and a small creek running
through the cave) - limestone cascades (waterfall) where you can jump in to cool off -
bird watching spots where you can see huge colourful hornbil birds in the wild, and
sometimes the raucous Raggiana bird of paradise in the late afternoons. Depending on
your walking ability the jungle hike can be shortened to 30 minutes (Robinson Crusoe site
only) or lengthened to 1 hour including the bat cave, 90 minutes including the waterfall
or 2 hours including the bird watching. Late afternoon, drive back to Jais Aben Resort.
Overnight Jais Aben Resort, Madang (deluxe room, room only).
Day 11 – Mon 22 Sep MADANG / PORT MORESBY / FLY OUT
Today we depart Madang on a morning flight to Port Moresby that connects with
afternoon flights to Cairns, Brisbane, Singapore and Hong Kong (the Madang-Port
Moresby flight is included in your tour package). If you have time in Port Moresby
between flights Ecotourism Melanesia vehicles and drivers are available for your last-
minute touring, souvenir shopping or errands before we farewel you at the airport.
Places you might like to visit: - the national museum (mainly cultural displays and takes
about 1 hour to look through) - the PNG Art artefact showroom (okay it’s a tin shed)
which has the largest range of artefacts, arts and crafts from all over the country. They
wil fumigate, pack and ship your goods overseas so you can avoid carrying stuff with you
on the plane if you wish. Especially important if you are travel ing to Australia where non-
fumigated artefacts may be confiscated and destroyed by Quarantine officers. - the rare
books section of the University bookshop which has several cabinets of out-of-print
goodies scoured from the internet including Papua New Guinea biology, anthropology,
ethnomusicology, geology, sociology and modern history. Expect to pay K200-K300 per
out-of-print volume. - The Bomana War Cemetery which is mainly of interest to
Australians. Almost 3400 graves of mainly Australian servicemen kil ed in action in World
War 2, including 600 on the infamous Kokoda Track.
1. Conditions of purchase. The general terms and conditions applicable to this tour are those specified on yourinvoice and on the booking page of our website.
2. Change of itinerary. Destinations are subject to change in response to local conditions. Where travel to aspecified destination is contraindicated by local conditions, travel to an alternative destination of similar valuewith similar activities wil be provided where possible, but claims for partial refunds based on quality ofsubstitute activities wil not be accepted.
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EM207 – GOROKA SHOW AND KALAM CULTURAL FESTIVAL. 12 – 22 SEPTEMBER 2013
3. Hotel accommodation. Hotel rooms in the towns transited on this tour are generally of three star standard. Hotel and resort rooms all have private bathrooms, TV and air-conditioning (except in the highlands), unlessotherwise specified. Hotel accommodation in Papua New Guinea towns is very limited. While we endeavour tobook you into the hotels stated in the tour itinerary, in cases where specified hotels are ful y booked by thetime we receive your tour deposit we may have to book you into alternative accommodation. In this situationwe strive to book you into the next-best available accommodation and we apologise in advance for anydisappointment. No compensation or partial refunds or discounts can be paid or allowed on the basis of theperceived quality of hotel rooms provided for you while on this tour because the wholesale rates offered to usby the higher quality tourist hotels are similar to the non-commissionable rates we have to pay lesser qualitymotels when the tourist hotels are ful .
4. Single supplement. Al accommodation included in the tour package quoted is twin-share. On payment of a20% single supplement levy and subject to availability, we wil arrange single occupancy for you at the hotelsand vil age guest houses on this tour. Single accommodation wil not be available for those nights designatedas multi-share or camping, where even twin-share privacy is not available. The single supplement charge is aflat rate and covers the cost of the extra rooms and our service fee for the additional arrangements. If you aretravel ing alone and you do not pay the single supplement, or if single supplement is not available, we wilroom you with another member of the tour group of the same gender. Smoking won’t be allowed in any of thehotel or guest house rooms on this tour.
5. Group size. The maximum group size for our smal group tours is 8 people plus 1 tour escort (EcotourismMelanesia staff) due to charter aircraft capacity limits. Where the number of bookings for any tour exceedsthis maximum, two parallel tour groups may be operated. Where the number of confirmed bookings for anyescorted tour is less than 6 at the booking deadline of two months before the tour, the tour may at ourdiscretion be cancel ed and deposits refunded OR alternative customised (ie unescorted) arrangements to anequivalent value may be offered.
6. Extras. Bar drinks, between-meal snacks, any meals not included in the package, and other extras at hotelscan be paid for in cash or with credit card direct to the hotel or restaurant.
7. Safety and security. Some activities on this tour may require water travel in local boats and native canoesthat may not be carrying a ful set of safety equipment. We do provide life jackets but if you require a specialfitting you should bring your own. Individuals who cannot swim are advised against taking tours involving openwater travel in small craft. Light hiking activities on this tour require an average level of fitness. Papua NewGuinea is sometimes portrayed as a dangerous destination, but although street crime is a concern in someurban areas and tribal fights are prevalent in some parts of the Highlands, the vast majority of the country,especially the rural areas, is safe and welcoming. It is very uncommon for a tourist to be a victim of crime inPNG because tourists do not usually visit areas where crime or tribal violence are prevalent. Nevertheless, PNGHolidays takes the safety and security of our visitors seriously and all tours we offer involve destinations thatwe rate as safe.
8. Climate and clothing. Coastal and lowland areas of Papua New Guinea, including the Sepik River, Wewak,Madang, Tufi and Port Moresby are perpetually warm-to-hot with high humidity. Nights are cooler but stilhumid. In the Highlands areas like Goroka, Mt Hagen and Simbai the days are generally warm and sunny withmoderately cold nights and mornings. We suggest visitors pack clothes made predominantly of cotton whichwil allow an evaporative cooling effect in hot humid areas. A battery operated personal fan is useful when
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EM207 – GOROKA SHOW AND KALAM CULTURAL FESTIVAL. 12 – 22 SEPTEMBER 2013
travel ing in rural areas without electricity. Pack a sweater or warm jacket for wearing in the Highlands in theevenings. Recommended sleeping attire is light track pants and sweat shirt or similar. Papua New Guinea is aconservative country and brief or revealing clothing worn by foreigners is frowned upon.
9. Packing suggestions. We suggest that your packing list include: a small flashlight with spare batteries, rainponcho, a small bath towel, your favourite soap in a leak-proof container, two rol s of your favourite toiletpaper, a one-litre water bottle, a small first aid kit. We recommend valuable personal items (camera, traveldocuments etc) be packed in zip lock plastic bags to protect them from the wet (rain, bow spray). Suitablefootwear for this tour includes boat shoes/tennis shoes/sneakers, and a pair of sandals/thongs/flip flops. Bringplenty of spare batteries for your digital camera because batteries seem to go flat more rapidly in the humidclimate and are not obtainable in all stores here.
10. Baggage – scheduled flights. The free baggage allowance on scheduled domestic flights is 16kg and thecarry-on limit is 5kg. Naturally you can check more baggage if you are prepared to pay the excess baggage ratewhich is approximately PGK8 per kilogram Port Moresby to Mt Hagen and PGK10 per kilogram Port Moresbyto Wewak. Due to narrow-body turbo-prop aircraft operating some scheduled flights, large carry-on items maybe taken off you and stored in the hold even if the weight is under the carry-on limit. Liquids are permitted inboth checked baggage and carry-on for domestic flights but pressurised aerosol spray cans are not permittedon any domestic flights in PNG either in checked luggage OR carry-on. Bring pump-action sprays or rol -ons. When flying out on your international flight, pack all gels, lotions and other liquids in your checked baggage ascarry-on luggage wil be hand searched and liquids including water bottles wil be removed. If you have liquidsthat you need during the flight, declare them, to airline staff at check-in.
11. Baggage – charter flights. On charter flights there is a strict 21kg total baggage limit per person – it is notpossible to check and pay for excess baggage. The total uplift weight of the 9-seater PAC750 charter aircraftthat we use for our escorted small group tours is 1000kg and we allow an average of 100kg for each of the 9passengers (8 tourists + our tour guide) including each person’s personal baggage. Some passengers and theirbags wil weight a bit over, some a bit under so assuming a total of 900kg for the passengers and their bagsthat leaves us with only a tight 100kg for the camping gear and food. Sorry but you wil have to leave yourkitchen sink behind.
12. Accommodation in rural areas. Vil age guest houses offer very basic accommodation in vil age-style hutsaccommodating two to four people per room. Bedding consists of rubber mattresses which wil have cleansheets (or sleeping bag) and pil ows, set up under mosquito nets. Sometimes beds are made on a woven maton the floor, sometimes on a raised bed frame. Lighting is provided by kerosene pressure lamps andflashlights. There is usually an outdoor bathroom and toilet – the toilet wil usually be a sit-down pedestal overa pit latrine and the outdoor shower wil consist of a screened-off area of grass or pebbles with an overheadpipe or drum of water that you can use to scoop water over yourself. In some vil ages a nearby stream is usedfor bathing. When bathing in public places it is appropriate to bathe in your clothes and change into dry gearonce back inside your room. Male visitors may bathe in shorts. Ladies should bring a sarong or quick-dry shortsand top to wear for bathing.
13. Meals. At vil age guest houses and rural lodges local-style food is served consisting of a variety of fresh fruitand fresh vegetables cooked in coconut milk, plain boiled or baked in banana leaves under hot stones (knownlocally as mumu). For breakfast they provide tea with fresh scones or pancakes, and fruit. At vil age guesthouses and small hotels where there is limited menu choice, or where set-menu meals are provided, these are
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included in the tour package. At larger hotels where a varied menu is available, lunches and dinners aresometimes not included in your tour, in order to give you some freedom of choice. Such hotel meals may bepaid for in cash or by major credit card. Your tour itinerary clearly states which meals are included in your tourpackage price, and which meals which are pay-as-you-go (PAYG).
If you are on a gluten free diet or require other special food just let us know in advance and we wil do our bestto accommodate you.
14. Water. Town water supplies in Papua New Guinea are treated and officially rated as safe to drink. In thevil ages, drinking water is usually col ected in rainwater tanks or carried in containers from clean watersources. However to prevent discomfort from drinking from a different water supply every day as you progressthrough your tour, we recommend you drink bottled or boiled water, or use water purification tablets. Inorder to reduce littering the vil ages with plastic bottles we usually ask vil age guest houses to supply drinkingwater that has been boiled and cooled, that we can use to refil our water bottles. In the vil ages you can alsoask for fresh coconut juice which is always sterile and safe to drink.
15. Visas. Tourist visas are available on arrival at Port Moresby airport for citizens of designated countriesincluding Australia, New Zealand, the USA, Canada and western European countries. The cost is PGK100 whichmust be paid in local currency. There is a bureau-de-change and automatic tel er machine in the Customs areawhere you can change money to pay for your visa. Getting your tourist visa issued wil be quick and easy if youhave a copy of your tour itinerary handy to show the immigration officer. Please note your passport must haveat least 6 months validity left on it in order to be issued a PNG visa. Passport-holders of central and easternEuropean countries, Middle Eastern countries, African and Caribbean countries must normally apply for a visaat least 6 weeks in advance, from a PNG embassy or high commission (London, Brussels, Washington DC,Canberra, Singapore, Manila) or through the Australian diplomatic mission in other countries.
16. Money. The best way to obtain PNG currency is by withdrawing a credit card cash advance on arrival. Automatic tel er machines operated by major banks in PNG wil accept MasterCard and Visa Card but there isan ATM withdrawal limit of PGK2000 (about USD$900) per day. Larger amounts can be withdrawn over thecounter in bank branches located in major towns. The currency exchange booths at Australian and Asianairports usually have PNG Kina currency in stock (banks and currency exchange booths in the city centres maynot), but don't change large sums of money before arrival in PNG because the exchange rate for purchasingPNG kina is better here.
17. Costs. To give you an indication of the costs of hotel meals, at hotels in Port Moresby fish and chips costsUSD$10, a medium pizza is USD$15, T-Bone Steak is USD$20 and a local beer is USD$4.
18. Health. The major health risk in PNG is malaria. Preventive medication must be taken while visiting PNG(see information below). Minor health risks for which tourists are advised to update their vaccinations includetyphoid, cholera and hepatitis B. Your personal first aid kit should include fabric sticking plasters (egElastoplast, not plastic strips), paracetamol, treatment for insect bites (eg Stingose or Calamine lotion/cream),antibiotic cream or powder (not antiseptic - Dettol etc is useless for preventing infection in the tropics, youhave to hit skin wounds with antibiotics straight away – ask your doctor to prescribe it for you, eg gentamycinointment), and prickly heat powder.
There are hospitals and doctors available in all major towns in PNG which can provide routine medical care,but when visitors require urgent medical attention we would normally contact their travel insurer to arrange a
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medical evacuation to Australia – this can be accomplished in a matter of hours as there are several medivaccompanies operating in PNG that are on 24 hour standby with fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters. Howeveravailability of medical care in some rural areas visited as part of your tour is limited and medical evacuationsmay be difficult to arrange in some locations. You must be aware of this risk especially if you have a pre-existing health condition that may flare up and require medical attention. While we are on-tour our office inPort Moresby is on 24-hour alert to provide assistance but we cannot guarantee to be able to obtain 24-hourattention from other service providers.
19. Malaria. Before arriving in PNG you must see your doctor or travel er's medical centre for anti-malariamedication, which you wil take during your time in PNG. No anti-malaria medication is 100% effective againstmalaria but taking something is better than not taking anything. If you are taking effective anti-malariamedication your chances of actually contracting malaria are quite low (but not zero). There are a number ofrecommended anti-malaria medications that can be taken weekly (eg Larium) or daily (eg Doxycycline). Doxycycline is actually an antibiotic and it was only in recent years that people discovered, quite by accident,that doxycycline is also an effective anti-malaria medication. The advantage of taking daily doxycycline toprevent malaria, if you can be sure to remember to take it every day, is that your blood remains saturated witha broad-spectrum antibiotic and this also prevents cuts and scratches from becoming infected, and may staveoff chest coughs and other internal infections that might otherwise spoil your vacation. If your doctor suggestsyou take chloroquine as anti-malaria medication please query this because nowadays much malaria in PNG isresistant to chloroquine and it is not recommended as an anti-malaria medication for visitors.
Even if you are infected with malaria you are unlikely to fall il during your visit here as the incubation periodfor the malaria parasite is a minimum of seven days so even if you get bitten by a malaria mosquito on yourfirst day here you are unlikely to experience malaria symptoms until you are back at home. Thus, if you fall ilafter returning home you must seek immediate medical treatment and inform the doctor that you have beenin PNG. Early malaria symptoms include body aches and pains, diarrhoea, headache, high temperatures andgeneral “sick” feeling. Symptoms are almost identical to flu. As the il ness advances without treatment you wilexperience fever and chil s (feeling cold while your body is actually hot). The only way to correctly diagnosemalaria is with a blood test. If laboratory facilities are not available, health workers in PNG generally treatpatients presumptively. In your country, your doctor or hospital wil probably insist on waiting for a blood testresult before treating you and you might suffer for up to 24 hours before beginning treatment. Pharmacies insmall towns in your home country may not stock medications for malaria and other such “exotic” il nesses. Therefore we recommend you either treat yourself with a presumptive course of malaria when you leave PNG,or take a box of the pil s home with you and take them presumptively if you fall il .
The medication recommended by the World Health Organisation for presumptive treatment of malaria inPapua New Guinea is a combination of artemether and Fansidar tablets. This treatment is available over-the-counter from pharmacies (five days artemether with Fansidar on the third day). Artemether has no known sideeffects or interactions with other medications so there is no harm done in taking the presumptive treatment ifyour symptoms are not caused by malaria. If you are female and you may be pregnant, some anti-malarials wilnot be suitable for you.
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Phone: (614) 890-1400 Fax: (614) 890-2397 NUTRITIONAL EVALUATION Tests Used for Analysis: Comments: Patient Symptom Survey. Patient's comments: My concerns are fatigue and hair loss. This analysis and the recommendations are not for the purpose of treating or curing disease (cancer, hepatitis, arthritis, diabetes, M.S., heart disease, etc). The purpose for this nutrition and lifes
CANDIDA ALBICANS Self-Screening Introduction The fol owing questionnaire was designed by William G. Crook, M.D., to be used by adults to identify one's predisposition to Candida albicans yeast overgrowth. It is not intended as a means for diagnosis, but only as an organized system for gathering information regarding candida . [For detailed information, see the web site information at .