Classroom lesson 路 The Kokoda Track馃嚨馃嚞 Papua New Guinea

The Kokoda Track

A famous jungle walking trail across the mountains of Papua New Guinea

A muddy jungle path winding through dense green forest along the Kokoda Track

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Kokoda Track is a famous walking trail that crosses the Owen Stanley mountain range in Papua New Guinea. It is 96 kilometres long, which sounds short - until you realise it goes up and down across very steep, very wet jungle. People who walk it take about a week, sleeping in villages along the way.

Tell me more

The path starts near the village of Owers' Corner, close to the capital Port Moresby, and ends at the village of Kokoda on the other side of the mountains. In between are huge rivers, slippery clay slopes, jungle so thick it blocks the sun, and clouds that drift along at head height. Many walkers describe it as the hardest week of their lives - and also one of the most beautiful.

The track passes through small villages, each with its own language. Walkers stay overnight in village guesthouses, share meals of kaukau and greens, and learn a few words of the local tok ples. Children in the villages often run circles around the visitors, who are puffing along carrying big backpacks.

PNG porters - skilled walkers who carry packs and help guide groups - are the heart of every Kokoda trip. Many come from the villages along the way. They know every rock, every shortcut, and which leaves keep mosquitoes off. People who have walked the track often talk about their porters with huge respect.

The Kokoda Track is also a place to learn about nature. Birds of paradise call from the trees. Tree kangaroos rest in the high branches. Long-nosed bandicoots scurry across the path. Walking it teaches you that a mountain isn't one thing - it's a thousand different worlds stacked on top of each other.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What might be the hardest thing about walking through a jungle for a week?
  2. 02Why might it be more useful to walk slowly with a local guide than to rush ahead alone?
  3. 03If your class made a walking track across your local area, what would walkers see and learn?
Try this

Classroom activity

On a long strip of paper, design your own 'class walking track'. Mark a start and an end. Add 5-7 stops along the way - villages, viewpoints, places to eat. What would be the most interesting thing to see at each stop? Pin the finished track up across the classroom wall.