Two weeks ago my brother, James, and his wife, Debbie, came to visit us in PNG. For 6 months we have been excitedly looking forward to their arrival and now, before we could hardly blink an eye, they have come and gone! But our time together was very special.
We spent a week together in PNG where both James and Debbie got to experience some extreme bush flying with Bill. On Sabbath we took them out to a remote village for church...




We slept that night in a traditional hut. It was all great fun and I highly recommend it!
Along the way we passed this extremely quaint post office that is still in use.
Monday was another high point of our trip as we made the 1 ½ hour trip by boat out to the Great Barrier Reef for a day of snorkeling. 




The water was so clear that you could stand on the boat and look down and see the fish swimming by.



After lunch we hiked to the top of Mt. Kootaloo where there use to be a radar station during World War II. The view was awesome.
Friday we sent James and Deb up on the skyrail to Kuranda village where we met them for a picnic lunch.
After enjoying a river tour on an old WWII Army Duck - it can drive on land like a jeep and go on water like a boat - they headed back down the mountain by train.
Sabbath morning, as an early birthday celebration for Betsy, we went to a bird sanctuary where they offer “Breakfast with the Birds.” A huge enclosed canopy/screen forms an artificial rainforest environment where the birds can freely roam. It was really interesting.
My absolute favorite was the baby stork that had recently hatched. He was about 2 feet tall and as a baby was way larger then most any other bird around other then the emus and cassowaries. 
In the afternoon we drove way up north to the Daintree rainforest which is a World Heritage site. To get there we had to cross a river the old fashioned way – by ferry boat.

I have always been a lover of the dense, green rainforest. The Daintree Discovery Center has an elevated aerial walkway and a 76 foot tower you can climb to get a canopy view of the rainforest. I really enjoyed this as it gives you different perspectives of the rainforest that you can’t get just from walking along the forest floor. It was pretty awesome.





























