 Travelling
 in PNG can be challenging. With almost no tourism infrastructure and 
limited information available in books and on websites, it can feel like
 you’re stepping into the great unknown. But this is exactly why 
travellers find this country so compelling. Nothing is contrived for 
tourists and every experience is authentic - even the main island of Bougainville
 is a largely DIY travel experience. The striking natural beauty and 
myriad complex cultures offer some riveting and truly life-affirming 
experiences. The island of New Guinea, of which Papua New Guinea is the 
eastern part, is only one-ninth as big as Australia, yet it has just as many mammal species, and more kinds of birds and frogs. PNG is Australia’s biological mirror-world. Both places share a common history going back tens of millions of years, but Australia
 is flat and has dried out, while PNG is wet and has become mountainous.
 As a result, Australian kangaroos bound across the plains, while in PNG
 they climb in the rainforest canopy.
Travelling
 in PNG can be challenging. With almost no tourism infrastructure and 
limited information available in books and on websites, it can feel like
 you’re stepping into the great unknown. But this is exactly why 
travellers find this country so compelling. Nothing is contrived for 
tourists and every experience is authentic - even the main island of Bougainville
 is a largely DIY travel experience. The striking natural beauty and 
myriad complex cultures offer some riveting and truly life-affirming 
experiences. The island of New Guinea, of which Papua New Guinea is the 
eastern part, is only one-ninth as big as Australia, yet it has just as many mammal species, and more kinds of birds and frogs. PNG is Australia’s biological mirror-world. Both places share a common history going back tens of millions of years, but Australia
 is flat and has dried out, while PNG is wet and has become mountainous.
 As a result, Australian kangaroos bound across the plains, while in PNG
 they climb in the rainforest canopy.The gritty capital Port Moresby, on the other hand, is big and sprawling and even a bit intimidating until you get under its skin and see past the bad press.
The greatest diversity of animal life occurs at around 1500m above sea level. The ancestors of many of the marsupials found in these forests were derived from Australia some five million years ago. As Australia dried out they vanished from that continent, but they continued to thrive and evolve in New Guinea, producing a highly distinctive fauna. Birds of paradise and bowerbirds also abound there, and the forest has many trees typical of the forests of ancient Gondwana. As you go higher the forests get mossier and the air colder. By the time you have reached 3000m above sea level the forests are stunted and wreathed in epiphytes. It’s a formation known as elfin woodland, and in it one finds many bright honeyeaters, native rodents and some unique relics of prehistory, such as the giant long-beaked echidna. Above the elfin woodland the trees drop out, and a wonderland of alpine grassland and herbfield dominates, where wallabies and tiny birds, like the alpine robin, can often be seen. It is a place where snow can fall and where early morning ice coats the puddles.































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