Download GPX file for this article
-7.2000146.6467Full screen dynamic map

From Wikivoyage
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Bulolo is a city in Morobe province in Papua New Guinea.

Understand

Bulolo was once an important gold dredging centre. Eight large dredges were built and used in the Bulolo River, and several of these dredges can still be seen abandoned today, slowly being reclaimed by the jungle. The major industry is now forestry and there are large plantings of Klinki pine (Norfolk Island pine) trees. It is in an area with a vast number of butterflies and other insects.

Get in

Bulolo is connected by road to Papua New Guinea's second largest city, Lae. PMVs (Public Motor Vehicles) ply the route.

There are three flights a week from the capital Port Moresby to Bulolo on Airlines PNG.

Get around

See

  • The Gold Dredges. Every part of the eight 2000-tonne dredges was airlifted into the Bulolo area using a German-made Junkers aircraft. They stopped being used in June 1965, after having turned over a total of 7.4mn cubic metres. One of the dredges was cut up to make bridges, two were shipped to South America. The others, in various conditions, can still be seen.

Do

  • Play Golf. Bulolo's nine-hole course is Papua New Guinea's oldest, first opened in 1947.

Buy

  • The Insect Farming and Trading Agency (IFTA), PO Box 129, Bulolo, PNG, fax: (+675) 474 5454, . IFTA was set up to provide villagers with eco-friendly alternatives to selling their land for logging rights. Now, over 1500 people participate in insect farming and collecting. It works on Fair Trade principles and is owned and operated by the P.N.G. University of Technology as a part of its community development program together with its sister establishment - The Rainforest Habitat. Both aim to promote rainforest friendly enterprises

Eat

Drink

Sleep

  • Pine Lodge, +675 474 5220, fax: +675 474 5284. First constructed during the Gold Rush this hotel still retains a certain colonial charm. Just 17 rooms.

Connect

Go next

  • Aseki and Watama.Close to 100km from Bulolo, heading southwest, are the villages of Aseki and Watama. These are famous for their "smoked" bodies. The burial ritual of the Anga people involved, and occasionally still involves, smoking the dead and leaving the bodies in a wood or bamboo cage in burial caves or on a mountain ridge. On the banks of the Snake River, closer to Lae, are limestone caves that were used as open-air burial grounds. Skeletal remains can still be seen.


This city travel guide to Bulolo is an outline and needs more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. Please plunge forward and help it grow!