Rabaul, Papua New Guinea cruise port guide
If surreal and unique experiences are your thing, then the Papua New Guinean town of Rabaul should tick your travel boxes. Found on the north eastern tip of New Britain Island (the largest island off mainland PNG) Rabaul, the former provincial capital, has quite a remarkable location. The town is inside the flooded caldera of a giant volcano and several sub-vents are still quite active today! The lively city was almost entirely devastated by Mount Tavurvur in 1994, covering the city in ashfall, but thankfully costing no lives. View less Since then, thanks to Rabaul’s deep-water port, commerce has been on the up, and a few shops and hotels have managed to find an audience. However, Rabaul’s remote location together with the volcano still being one of the most active and dangerous in Papua New Guinea means tourism in not rife. Rabaul has an impressive WWII history which includes a 300-mile network of tunnels dug by Japanese POW designed to conceal munitions and stores. After the Pearl Harbour bombings, the Japanese used Rabaul as their South Pacific base for the last four years of WWII, and by 1943 there were about 110,000 Japanese troops based in Rabaul. Post war, the island was returned to Australia, before it was granted independence in 1975. It should be noted that patience is a virtue here. However, that is not all bad. The slow pace of transportation allows travellers to marvels at the quite astonishing landscape. Divers will also be richly rewarded – the marine life of the island is extraordinary.
About Rabaul, Papua New Guinea
Rabaul is a former provincial capital on the Gazelle Peninsula of New Britain, Papua New Guinea, set within a spectacular harbor caldera. Nearly destroyed by a volcanic eruption in 1994, it attracts 10-12 cruise ships annually with its dramatic volcanic scenery, WWII history including Japanese tunnels and sunken warships, and the vibrant culture of the indigenous Tolai people.
The WWII heritage is extraordinary: Japan based 110,000 troops here by 1943, digging an estimated 563 km of tunnels throughout the caldera's ridges—many still explorable today. General Yamamoto's underground bunker marks where the architect of Pearl Harbor spent his last days before being shot down over Bougainville in April 1943. Simpson Harbour contains dozens of sunken Japanese warships accessible by scuba, making Rabaul a premier WWII diving destination. Active Mount Tavurvur, climbed by the adventurous, emits sulfurous steam from its flanks and overlooks a harbor where hot springs bubble from the shoreline.
Cruises visiting Rabaul, Papua New Guinea
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New Guinea Island Encounter
Carnival Encounter · Oceania · 10 nights
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64-Day Kimberley Expedition & Islands of the Pacific
Seabourn Pursuit · Australia · 64 nights
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32-Day Kimberley Expedition, Indonesia & Papua New Guinea
Seabourn Pursuit · Australia · 32 nights
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45-Day Kimberley Expedition, Indonesia & Papua New Guinea
Seabourn Pursuit · Australia · 45 nights
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Darwin to Lautoka
Silver Cloud · Oceania · 23 nights
from $24,300
$1,056 / night
54-Day Indonesia, Papua New Guinea & Islands of the Pacific
Seabourn Pursuit · South America · 54 nights
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