Rabaul Mask Festival

Rabaul Mask Festival

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5 Days From

$4536

Rabaul Mask Festival

5 Days Starting and ending in Rabaul, Papua New Guinea

Visiting: Rabaul, Port Moresby

Tour operator:

Crooked Compass

Tour code:

2630

Guide Type:

Fully Guided

Physical rating:

Medium

Special diets catered:

Vegetarians

Tour operated in:

English

Interests:

Cultural, History

Activities:

Sightseeing, Walking

From: $4536

NB: Prices correct on 21-Dec-2024 but subject to change.

This tour is no longer available, please see similar tours below or send an enquiry

Tour Overview


  • Learn about old Rabaul town, buried under volcanic ash in 1994

  • VIP viewing of dancers wearing traditional masks and spectacular costumes from all over Papua New Guinea.

  • View steam vents and hot springs as you climb of the active Mt Tavurvur volcano

  • Discover WWII history as you experience a network of tunnels leading to the Japanese military command bunker

  • Marvel at a spectacular Bainings Fire Dance where men immerse themselves into flames and escape completely unharmed


The Mask Festival is the only festival of its kind in Papua New Guinea. Together with their amazing costumes, groups from all across the islands gather in the coastal town of Kokopo to showcase their elaborate ancestral and spirit masks whilst performing ritual dances, each style forging the unique cultural identity of a tribe.

Witness the 'Kinavai' opening ceremony at dawn, as the arrival of ancestral spirits are welcomed to chants and the beating of kundu drums by elders and initiated young men on canoes.

Experience the spectacular Bainings Fire Dance from the Tolai’s of the mainland of East New Britain Province, where in this night-time traditional dance, initiated young men perform harrowing dances through blazing fires amidst evocative chanting by their elders.  Join us as we experience one of the most fascinating festivals Papua New Guinea has to offer.

Highlights

  • Learn about old Rabaul town, buried under volcanic ash in 1994.

  • Experience a VIP viewing of dancers wearing traditional masks and spectacular costumes from all over Papua New Guinea.

  • View steam vents and hot springs as you climb the active Mt Tavurvur volcano.

  • Discover WWII history through a network of tunnels leading to the Japanese military command bunker.

  • Marvel at the Bainings Fire Dance where men immerse themselves into flames and escape completely unharmed.

  • Visit the Kokopo Museum with its impressive range of war relics and historical displays.

  • Enjoy panoramic views from the Malmaluan lookout over the town of Rabaul and Simpson Harbour.

Itinerary

Expand All

Day 1 - Arrival In Rabaul, East New Britain

Location: Rabaul

Accommodation: Resort

Accommodation Name: Rapopo Beach Resort or similar

Meals Included: Dinner

Welcome to Papua New Guinea. Upon arrival at East New Britain’s Tokua Airport, you will be met by your Australian Tour Leader and English-speaking local guides who will accompany you on a tour across the Gazelle Peninsula to observe cocoa, copra and palm oil cultivation undertaken in the rich volcanic soil, noting the area’s significant contribution to the national economy. At Keravat, we will visit Niugini Organics factory, where a local family partner with local smallholder coconut harvesters to produce products made from Raw 100% Organic Virgin Coconut Oil that are marketed globally. Products include scented coconut oil soap and organic virgin coconut oil which was awarded a United Kingdom’s Guild of Fine Food “Great Taste Award Star”.Along the way 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).It was from Wesleyan Methodist Mission in Fiji that the first mission team were sent to New Britain Island in 1875. Fijian missionaries’ proselytization legacy and martyrdom is today honoured in Kabakada village, next to the Kulau Lodge Beach Resort. A memorial monument was erected on top of the buried remains of the four slain martyrs on Vunela hilltop on 15 August 1975, the one hundredth year anniversary of the arrival of the Fijian missionaries in the New Guinea islands. The burial site now known as the Fijian Cemetery holds 41 graves which are now part of the Vunela historical tourism site. Six married, and three single, men were chosen to work under the supervision of Reverand George Brown, an experienced missionary, who had served in Samoa. Within three years, most of them were dead. A powerful New Britain pagan chief massacred three of them, and some died of malaria. But, there was no shortage of Fijians, who were ready to take their place.Tonight, we relax in idyllic surroundings at Kulau Beach Lodge, Kabakada Village on the shore of Talia Bay. Before dinner enjoy a swim and snorkel the house reef which is home to many varied species of coral and marine life.For dinner tonight we will taste Aigir is 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 will also be demonstrated. (L,D)Overnight – Kulau Lodge Beach Resort or similar

Day 2 - Rabaul – Volcanoes & War History

Location: Rabaul

Accommodation: Resort

Accommodation Name: Rapopo Beach Resort or similar

Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner

This morning, we travel to Simpsons Harbour to enjoy spectacular views 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 volcanoes octogenarian comfortably complete the ascent. 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, lava, magma and related geological, geophysical and geochemical phenomena. 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.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.We travel back through Rabaul where we will visit the underground Japanese Hospital tunnels dating from World War Two and the tranquil memorial gardens at the Chinese cemetery where your tour leader, John Gannan, will explain aspects of the historically long association the Chinese have had with East New Britain, along with the many other people and cultures that have shaped this part of New Britain Island. 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.We end the afternoon with a drive along the picturesque coastline to Kokopo to stay at the Rapopo Plantation Resort. Before dinner enjoy a swim and snorkel the house reef which is home to many varied species of coral and marine life. The resort’s large swimming pool can also provide a relaxing end to the busy day! (B,L,D)Overnight – Rapopo Plantation Resort, Kokopo or similar

Day 3 – Kinavai And Rabaul Mask Festival

Location: Rabaul

Accommodation: Resort

Accommodation Name: Rapopo Beach Resort or similar

Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner

Gather at dawn on the Kokopo foreshore for the Kinavai, which signifies the landing of the Tolai people in East New Britain several hundred years ago and marks the official opening of the Mask Festival. The Kinavai represented with the arrival of the Tumbuan in their traditional masks, alighting from canoes paddled in the pre-dawn darkness from the neighbouring Matupit island. Dancing to the primal sounds of chanting and kundu drums, the revered ancestral spirits arise to welcome dancers wearing traditional masks from all over Papua New Guinea.Return to the hotel in Kokopo to refresh and then travel a short distance to the festival grounds for the opening day of the Mask Festival. Among many highlights, the standouts include the Kusare warriors from Kandrian on the South coast of New Britain’s western province and the immediately recognisable Malagan Mask Dancers from New Ireland. From closer to home, the tall Tubuans from the Pomio district, the Tolai whip dancers along with neighbouring New Ireland’s renowned Malagan mask men all add to the colour and movement. (B,L,D)Overnight – Rapopo Plantation Resort, Kokopo or similar

Day 4 - Rabaul Mask Festival - Colonial History - Bainings Fire Dance

Location: Rabaul

Accommodation: Resort

Accommodation Name: Rapopo Beach Resort or similar

Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner

Spend the early morning snorkelling the house reef at Rapopo Resort before the second day of the Rabaul Mask Festival kicks off. We return to the festival grounds this morning to continue to enjoy a VIP viewing of the day’s cultural performances.After departing the festival grounds, we will visit the Kokopo Museum which houses an impressive range of war relics along with an informative display of colonial, military and natural history. We will drop by the Gazelle International Hotel to enjoy a cooling beverage and to stand on the historic Queen Emma Steps, overlooking the breathtaking backdrop with ocean views over Blanche Bay. The bay is named after HMS Blanche, which surveyed the bay under the command of Captain Cortland Simpson in 1872. Standing on “Emma’s Steps” we hear stories about the achievements and exploits of Queen Emma Coe. She 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.After dinner, you will be transferred to Gaulim Village in the Bainings area. This evenings spectacular Bainings Fire Dance is performed only by men from the Bainings clans, where they immerse themselves into the flames of the fire and escape completely unharmed. This amazing ritual is not performed anywhere else in the world. One of few cultures in Papua New Guinea who do not use the Kundu drum as their rhythmic percussion instruments, the Bainings clan instead use bamboo, and the sound is just as unique as the fire dance itself. After the performance, return to your hotel. (B,L,D)Overnight – Rapopo Plantation Resort, Kokopo or similar

Day 5 - Bita Paka War Cemetery & Airport Departure

Location: Port Moresby

Accommodation: Resort, ResortResort

Meals Included: Breakfast

After Breakfast you will be transferred to the Tokua airport for your flight back to Port Moresby. On the drive to the airport, you will 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. Time permitting, we will visit Bita Paka War Cemetery, 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.Transfer to Rabaul Tokua Airport in time for your departure flight (flight not included). (B)

What's Included

  • Meet and greet service on arrival Port Moresby and Rabaul

  • 4 nights accommodation

  • 4 Breakfasts, 4 Lunches, 4 Dinners

  • Australian Tour Leader + English-speaking local guides

  • All activities as per itinerary

  • Private transportation

  • Entrance fees, sightseeing and permits

What's Not Included

  • International and domestic flights

  • Visas

  • Travel and medical insurance

  • All services, meals other than those indicated above

  • Personal porters

  • Any changes to the proposed and confirmed program.

  • All items of a personal nature e.g. drinks, laundry, telephone calls, tips etc

  • Early check-in/Late check-out

Check out our Q&As

  • What is the significance of the Kinavai ceremony during the Mask Festival?

    The Kinavai ceremony marks the official opening of the Mask Festival and signifies the landing of the Tolai people in East New Britain several hundred years ago. It involves the arrival of the Tumbuan in traditional masks, alighting from canoes paddled in the pre-dawn darkness, accompanied by chanting and Kundu drums.

  • What can I expect during the climb of Mt Tavurvur?

    The climb of Mt Tavurvur is not too arduous and offers views of steam vents and hot springs at the base of the volcano. You may also see megapode egg hunters who dig into the black sand to find prized eggs.

  • What unique cultural experience is offered by the Bainings Fire Dance?

    The Bainings Fire Dance is a unique cultural experience where men from the Baining clans immerse themselves into flames and escape unharmed. This ritual is accompanied by bamboo percussion instruments and is not performed anywhere else in the world.

  • What historical sites are included in the sightseeing tour on Day 4?

    The sightseeing tour includes visits to the Vulcanological Observatory, Matupit Island, the New Guinea Club, and the Memorial Gardens of the Chinese Cemetery. You will also see the Japanese Hospital tunnels and the large barges of the Japanese Imperial forces.

  • What optional activities are available on Day 4?

    On Day 4, you can choose to relax at the resort, take a scenic tour of the Gazelle Peninsula, or engage in half-day scuba diving and fishing activities at your own expense.

  • Will the accommodation included meet local health and safety regulations?

    Yes. Focusing on providing authentic experiences where ever you are in the world, Crooked Compass has access to a vast array of accommodation styles. From boutique properties in larger cities to local guest houses and home stays within small villages. Crooked Compass ensures that local authenticity flows through your accommodation throughout your tour without compromising standard.

  • What sort of transportation is used for your tours?

    Transportation utilised on a Crooked Compass escorted small group tour is a combination of a private air conditioned vehicle and local transport where appropriate. This may include a local bus ride, use of the cities metro system, a domestic flight to another city or overnight train ride.

  • What Ethical Travel credentials does the tour company have?

    Crooked Compass strives to be a leader in sustainable tourism. Crooked Compass is firmly committed to the principles of ethical travel. Our comprehensive Sustainable Tourism Practices policy summarises our commitments and actions. Although the very basis of our ground operations lends itself to the ethos of sustainable tourism, this policy re-iterates our commitment to: Use locally owned hotels Use locally owned ground agents Use local guides and drivers Promote community tourism projects from homestays to craft shops Support charities that work within the destinations that we travel to Carbon offset our travels

  • Who runs your tours and are they experts in their fields?

    Crooked Compass works with the worlds best operators who are specialists in their country, region and cities providing you with in depth local knowledge. We use local guides who live and breathe the areas they work in, making sure you experience their region, their way. We believe it is far better to have a local guide who knows a lot about a little than a text book trained Western tour guide who knows a little about a lot. Using local guides also ensures that money stays within local communities and supports the regions we visit.

  • What can I expect from a Crooked Compass tour that I wouldn't get from travelling with an alternative company?

    Crooked Compass provides a sensory way to understand the world – we help you live like a local, eat like a local, do what the locals do and seek the faces behind the places whilst discovering untouched lands and natural beauty. Crooked Compass tours delve deep into the heart and soul of a destination ensuring you get out of your journey all you intended and much, much more. Our intriguing itineraries have been created by travellers for travellers. Steering travellers to follow a different path, Crooked Compass’ itineraries allow you to experience the world’s most fascinating destinations in ways you never dreamed possible. It brings to life those ‘bucket list’ experiences you have yearned to do and separates the travellers from the tourists. Crooked Compass tours are culturally rich, reward travellers with unexpected encounters and uncommon rendezvous, creating truly unique, authentic travel experiences.

  • Who do your tours cater for?

    Crooked Compass escorted small group tours cater for those who are well travelled seeking the what’s next and what’s new. Our travellers are curious minded soft adventurers who want to uncover something more than the mainstream tourist trail. Crooked Compass tours draw travellers with an interest in sustainable tourism and conservation for the areas they visit. A Crooked Compass traveller is someone who is seeking something fresh and unique, who has a yearning for authenticity and discovery, with an appreciation for cultures, tradition and the natural world. We call them Cultural Purists.

  • I am concerned about my impact on travelling through untouched regions. Can I offset?

    Yes. All travellers on Crooked Compass tours have the option to offset their part of their tour’s carbon footprint by donating $4AUD (tax-deductible) at time of booking. 100% of these funds are donated to Greenfleet, an environmental non-profit organisation dedicated to protecting our climate by restoring our forests. By partnering with Greenfleet, we are confident that our carbon offset program provides genuine and lasting environmental benefits. Your offset donation funds plant trees and restore permanent native forests in Australia and New Zealand. As they grow, these forests provide many community and environmental benefits by absorbing carbon emissions, protecting our unique biodiversity, restoring habitat for native wildlife, preventing soil salinity and erosion, improving water quality and much more. If you’d like to find out more and offset the rest of your carbon emissions, visit www.greenfleet.org.au

Reviews of this operator

Jeff Rehn  

A wonderful trip to Saudi Arabia organised by Crooked Compass

07-Apr-2022

A wonderful trip to Saudi Arabia organised by Crooked Compass. Considering the country is just opening up to tourism everything went very well - flights, trips, transfers, guides and accommodation - thank you CC - highly recommended

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Pauline Mavis Rusby  

We were kept safe at all times.

09-May-2022

We were kept safe at all times. When unexpected hurdles appeared they were handled without fuss. Our tour was informative, picturesque and comfortable.

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Tina Watts-Seale  

Family holiday to Vietnam

01-Aug-2022

We booked a family holiday to Vietnam with Crooked Compass and it was perfect. The booking process was easy and Lisa took all of our requests on board so that the trip was exactly what we wanted. All flights, transfers, accommodations, guides and activities were fantastic, with great communication throughout the whole trip. Would highly recommend, we will be booking again soon!

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Book with Confidence

  • Low Deposit

    Crooked Compass requires a minimum deposit of 20% or the full booking value, whichever is less, with the final balance not due until 60 days before departure.

  • Cancellation Policy

    We don't charge a cancellation fee, here is a summary of crooked compass charges.

    Up to 61 days before tour starts: Forfeit 100% of deposit.

    At 60 days before tour starts: Forfeit 100% of booking price.

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