Goroka is the capital of the Eastern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea. It is a town of approximately 19,000 people (2000), 1600m above sea level. It has an airport (in the centre of town) and is on the “Highlands Highway”, about 285 km from Lae in Morobe province and 90 km from the nearby town of Kainantu also in the Eastern Highlands. Other nearby towns include Kundiawa in Simbu Province and Mount Hagen in Western Highlands Province. It has a mild climate, known as a “perpetual Spring”.
It is the home of several national institutions: CRMF Christian Radio Missionary Fellowship, the PNG Institute of Medical Research, the National Film Institute, the Melanesian Institute, the Raun Raun Theatre Company and the University of Goroka. Several NGOs also have presences there, including Oxfam and Save the Children. The town’s single largest hotel is the Bird of Paradise, owned by the Coral Seas Hotels chain.
Coffee is a common cash crop in the area; smaller industries include trout farms, pigs, beekeeping and food gardens (broccoli, kau kau or sweet potato, carrots, ginger, and peanuts are examples of produce that grow well here; nearby Bena Bena is known for its pineapples)
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In May, Goroka hosts the PNG Coffee Festival.
The Goroka Show event takes place annually around the time of the country’s Independence Day (September 16). It continues for two or three days. The Goroka Show is the oldest show in Papua New Guinea, over 50 years of “keeping the spirit alive”.
It is a relatively small town, containing a bank, a police station, one of the few airports in the province, several stores, a hospital, a post office, a second-hand market, two food markets, and several churches. The Highlands Highway is the only paved road that leads out of it, but there are several smaller, unpaved roads, including one of the roads to Mount Wilhelm.
The Wahgi River runs along one side of Kundiawa, and the Simbu River, which runs on and becomes the Wahgi, flows along the other side. The terrain around Kundiawa is very steep and mountainous, and many people walk several kilometres each way to get to Kundiawa from their villages because they don’t have access to roads
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Goroka has a relatively cool tropical monsoon climate (Am) due to altitude with heavy rainfall most of the year and low rainfall from June to September.
They appreciate the wonders of nature and survive by hunting and gathering with their tight-knit families. Intertribal warfare is common and elaborate makeup and ornaments are used to impress the enemy. Decorative shell necklaces are seen as a sign of prosperity, as these were once used as a form of currency.