Sunday, November 15, 2009

Latest Videos

Hi to all the BIGFISH out there. A couple of the latest videos to get done I thought you might like to take a look at.
The first is from New Ireland PNG where we went Kayaking in September.

And the second is one from Borneo which was made to help promote our next trip in May 2010. Hope you enjoy.

Monday, September 21, 2009

INTRODUCING ELVIS


Elvis Onja is the newest member of Team BIGFISH. Through the Adopt and Angel programme setup by the Kokoda Track Foundation Team BIGFISH has adopted Elvis this year. Elvis is in Year 3 at Kokoda Primary School. Kokoda is the most northern village along the Kokoda Track and most trekkers either start or finish their trek at this point. Elvis is an excellent student and his teacher's believe he has great potential to continue his primary education. Elvis is an excellent leader and was nominated as class leader for 2009. His favourite subjects at school are English and Science. He wants to become a Science teacher when he finishes school. Elvis' mother is a single parent and is a subsistence farmer in the home village. She struggles to earn an income to make a living and cannot afford to pay for all her children's school fees.
Elvis is very grateful for his scholarship and wants the Kokoda Track Foundation to provide more books to the library at Kokoda Primary School so that he can improve his English. Elvis writes "Thank you so much for your love and support towards me and my school". I am looking forward to meeting Elvis on my next trip to Kokoda and welcoming him onto the BIGFISH team.

Monday, August 17, 2009

BIGFISH GO ROGAINING AT LAKE MACQUARIE

Gazza was joined by Mal Roberts for 12 hours of fun scrambling around the lantana laden bush, up and down the hills, and throught the rocky creeks around Lake Macquarie. Although we finished a credible 13th overall and 5th in the male section a few small navigation errors probably cost us about 10 places. It was however great weather and some beautiful locations. The lantana however was as usual very nasty. Mal was great on his maiden voyage out as a BIGFISH and hopefully can join us again in some future events.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

BIGFISH ON WHEELS

Hey there. Check out the new BIGFISH flagship !! Everyone will see us coming now. Go Team BIGFISH





Wednesday, August 12, 2009

OUR THOUGHTS AND WISHES ARE WITH ALL

Following the confirmation yesterday that there were no survivors from the plane crash at Kokoda, I , on behalf of all the BIGFISH team, offer our sincere condolences to all the family and friends of those that lost there lives in preparation to undertake this amazing journey in PNG. Our thoughts are also with all the staff and guides from No Roads Expeditions.
May they rest in peace.

Monday, July 27, 2009

GAZZA HAS SUCCESS WITH ECO TOILET TRIP

Gazza's recent trip to PNG and the Kokoda Track proved to be a mostly successful one. After arrival via a very crazy flight into Kagi's very small runway in the middle of the mountains I was joined by local guides Robert, Stanley & Guy to form the "toilet team". After two days in Kagi we completed and commissioned the first ever Eco toilet(Rotaloo)on the track. We then trekked 40+kms to Kokoda and started work on the neext toilet located at the Kokoda Skills centre. Progress went well and with the plans left behind and a programme put in place this unit should be going in the next few weeks. Then it was back to Sogeri to view the site at Iarowari High School. In desperate need on new toilet facilities this school will be the third location and become a pilot programme for Eco type toilets in this area. Plans are now in place to get this started in the coming weeks. After that it was back to Sydney and planning to keep this project moving. Some photos of the variuos locations and progress included below for your viewing pleasure. Please contact me should you have any questions.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Team No Roads BIGFISH Expedtions at Geoquest


Our intrepid team of Gazza (me), Liss (Lissanthea Taylor), Pete (Peter Chan), Coxy (Peter Cox) were joined by our amazing support crew headed up by Timmy & Alex at this years Geoquest 48 hour Adventure race held at Forster and Barrington Tops areas. Some 50 hours after we started we made our away across the finish line. Not quite as we had planned when we had to withdraw with two legs left and skip the last trek leg. But none the less it was a mighty effort by everyone. See all the news on the Team report here (soon). Pics of the event will be added to this post shortly. Thanks to our sponsors No Roads Expeditions, ARea51 & BIGFISH International

The first photos are now available. More to come soon.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

NO ROADS BIGFISH BACK FROM BORNEO & INDO

WHAT A TRIP NO ROADS BIGFSIH had to Borneo. Check out the video and you will want to go and visit these incredible animals as well.


Team No Roads BIGFISH Expeditions arrive back from their amazing time in Borneo and the Komodo Islands. Check out some pics from Day 4 below. A trip report is now loaded below and a video of the trip will be posted soon. For more pics just follow the links below.
ENJOYING THE PHOTOS FROM THE NO ROADS BIGFISH ADVENTURE ? DO YOU WANT TO SEE MORE ?

Check out DAYS 1 to 6 of the Borneo Stage and all the Orangutan action by clicking onto any one of the following links.

Click here to see view action from Day 1
Click here to see view action from Day 2
Click here to see view action from Day 3
Click here to see view action from Day 5
Click here to see view action from Day 6

Check out DAYS 7 to 12 of the Indonesian Stage and all the Komodo Dragon and kayaking action by clicking onto any one of the following links.

Click here to see view action from Day 7
Click here to see view action from Day 8
Click here to see view action from Day 9
Click here to see view action from Day 10
Click here to see view action from Days 11 & 12

WANT TO HELP THE ORANGUTANS SURVIVE ? THEN SUPPORT THE AOP AND NO ROADS BIGFISH FUND RAISING PROGRAMME.
The above trip helped raise over $13,ooo which was put towards the Adoption programme and also the Safeguard programme. There is already another trip planned for 2010 and we aim to raise even more than last year. Interested? Then go to the AOP website or No Roads website for all the information. For any questions you can contact Gazza at bigfish@dgsundin.com.au

Enjoy the following trip report as told by Wendy O'Hanlon. This will make you want to visit these amazing creatures
‘Forest people’ melt many hearts by Wendy O’Hanlon

PICTURE this: A full moon blazing, lightning cracking the clear night sky, cruising in a small wooden boat on a river in the Borneo jungle with millions of fireflies lighting up the mangrove-palm riverbanks like magical Christmas tree lights. Or trekking through a jungle swamp, knee-deep in mud and tree roots with a massive tropical thunderstorm pelting down unrelentingly for two hours. Or sitting still, just watching the facial expressions and movement of beautiful wild orangutans, so close you could reach out and touch them… ..It had long been a dream of mine to travel to Borneo to see the orangutans – the ‘people of the forest’ and thanks to a passionate initiative by Australian tour group No Roads BIGFISH, my dream came true in May, 2009.This incredible Borneo adventure was more memorable because we went deep into the jungle, way down river where there were no roads and no tourists. And we raised thousands of dollars to help save the orangutans who are facing extinction. The No Roads BIGFISH team’s motivation is to not only visit amazing regions throughout the world but to leave something positive behind for those communities.
Our group of 11 Aussies raised $13,000 for the Australian Orangutan Project to care for orphaned orangutans and enough money to protect 6000 hectares of jungle habitat through Safeguard. This charity funds Wildlife Protection Units that patrol national parks to protect them from illegal loggers intent on clearing land for palm oil plantations. Indonesia has the dubious honour of a Guinness Book of Records entry for the highest level of deforestation anywhere in the world. The massive expansion of palm oil plantations, most illegal, is the single most significant threat to the survival of the orangutans. The equivalent of 300 soccer fields are being deforested every hour for palm oil plantations. The orangutans who call the forest ‘home’ are not relocated by the loggers – they are shot, killed and the babies sold as pets. It costs just 75 cents to protect one hectare of jungle forest and $2000 a year to care for an orphaned orangutan. Our group adopted more than 100 orangutan babies. You can adopt a baby for a whole year for just $55. Orangutans are only found in Indonesia and Malaysia on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. In 1900 there were more than 315,000 wild orangutans – today there are less than 45,000 and they are being slaughtered at a rate of about 6000 every year. When you watch these amazing creatures in the jungle, watch the mums cradle their babies, the big boss dads peacefully chomping on bananas, watch them moving gracefully through the tree tops, watch their gorgeous faces – your heart just melts. How could any human harm such a creature? Orangutans are 97% genetically like us. The babies rely on their mums to teach them everything, including the important job of building nests high in the treetops away from predators on the ground. They build a new nest every night – keeping on the move in search for food. Our trip to Tanjung Putting National Park in Kalimantan, Central Borneo was ‘totally awesome’. We were so very blessed. We saw 18 orangutans at the feeding stations and surrounds and more along the riverbanks. We were also enchanted by dozens and dozens of proboscis monkeys and macaque monkeys, plus one naughty gibbon (who slipped into the ceiling of a food storage shed like a contortionist). Then there’s the abundant bird life - the magnificent hornbills – and butterflies of all sizes and colours. Our group also encountered a couple of saltwater crocodiles, some wild boar (buaya) and one fleet-footed clouded leopard some hours before sunrise. Tanjung Puting National Park is the base of world-renown orangutan expert Dr. Birute Galdikas, who has been studying and living with the orangutans since 1971 when she was just 25 years old. Dr Galdikas was mentored by Dr Louis Leakey along with Diane Fossey and Jane Goodall. Camp Leakey, inside the Tanjung Puting National Park, is the site of the longest continuous study by a principal investigator of any non-human wild animal in the history of science. Tanjung Putting became our home for a week – or more specifically the Camp Leakey River was our home as we chugged along on the blue-and-white wooden klotok boats. We ate, toured and slept on the boats – pulling up alongside riverbanks and just lashing a rope to the Nipah mangrove palms. The crew served three delicious meals a day – meat, fish, tempeh, rice, vegetables, fruit and other treats such as French toast and pancakes. Before arriving at Tanjung Putting, we spent one night on land at Rimba Orangutan Eco-Lodge built above swamp ground on the banks on the Sekonyer River. Visitors share the lodge with Macaque monkeys who scatter across the rooftops and walking platforms and, sometimes, just sometime, stay still long enough for a photograph. Our days in the jungle were spent visiting information centres and watching orangutans make their way to feeding stations deep in the national parks. These were the orangutans that were once orphans. They had been released back to the jungle and had started family trees of their own. At Tanjung Putting, the oldest orangutan we saw was Tutut who was 40. We also met Siswi (35), Samson (17), Riga (35) and her son, Roy (2), Carlos (18), Popai (19), Unyuk (30) and her daughter Ursula (2). And we met the very famous, Princess, who did a kind-of meet and greet at the wharf and checked we humans out numerous times. She also showed off her one-year-old son, Putri, and two-year-old son, Persi. Thirty-five-year-old Princess is a cover girl on many magazines across the world because of her cheeky character and her intelligence. She often ‘borrows’ the little boats and rows along the river searching for food growing along the banks. When she has had her fill, she promptly ditches the boat and heads back into the jungle. The national park carers have to send out search parties for the boats. Princess is also a dab hand at taking the keys to the food storage sheds and unlocking the padlock to have a snack. We saw her in action, and saw her being sprung by a carer. She gave a ‘thumbs up’ sign that probably meant ‘next time’. At nearby Tanjung Harapan National Park we saw Wana Laga (27) a sub-adult male in the river palms. He had not been sighted for many years. We watched the big male Yani (24) with his big boss cheeks lord it over the feeding platform and then we watched in awe as Ceping and her six-year-old, Citra, cautiously made their way across the treetops towards Yani. The baby orangutan was definitely not going anywhere near Yani. His mum, Ceping, was so patient as she led him across the treetops – at times prying away his long fingers wrapped around tree stems, pulling his legs, coaxing him to continue to the feeding platform. We watched for about an hour until the mum reached the platform. With Citra remaining in the treetops, Ceping filled her mouth with fruit and headed back to feed her son. She did this many times. Such devotion and patience. At dusk we would settle on our klotok boats, chug somewhere up-river and watch with wonder as families of proboscis monkeys settled in the riverbank trees, blending in with the brown leaves. The babies clinging to their mums’ chests, the young ones chattering and mucking around, the big males haunched on the branches, their long white tails hanging down. These dusky silhouettes are unforgettable. The proboscis monkey has a large nose and in profile is quite striking – especially with that long, white tail. Every day was an awesome experience. One day we trekked 12 kilometres into the jungle to stay overnight in tents at Pesalat Camp – deep in the jungle. This jungle camping experience is only available to scientists and researchers. No Roads Big Fish had organised a special pass for our small team. It was during this trek that we encountered the tropical thunderstorm – just as we were entering the swamp. Two hours later, we arrived at Pesalat Camp drenched, all our gear sodden (camera gear okay), our hands and feet wrinkled, leeches galore. The village crew from Kumai were already there setting up our tents and boiling water for hot drinks. We were ecstatic! Hey, if you are going to trek through the Borneo jungle swamp, you might as well do it right – smack bang in the middle of a tropical thunderstorm! The next morning, on our way back to the klotoks, we stopped at Pesalat plant nursery where we planted native trees in a re-afforestation area. Again, we were blown away. So deep in the jungle and yet we were given the GPS co-ordinates so that we can monitor the growth of our trees on Google Earth from our comfy Aussie homes. Re-afforestation is an integral part of the grand plan to save the orangutans and all the jungle creatures. Our whole jungle adventure was made even more memorable by the passion and warm friendship of the klotok crew, the Kumai villagers (whose children we gave Aussie souvenirs such as kangaroo and koala toys) and the Borneo-born tour guides. We talked, laughed, swapped stories and learned the words of the Bahasa and Malay languages. There were real tears and hugs when saying goodbye. In just one week in the Borneo jungle, this small group of Aussies had experienced something that we will never forget. And I have become a passionate orangutan supporter. You can’t get that close without your heart being touched.
To read more about the orangutans go to
http://www.orangutan.org.au/; http://www.noroads.com.au/. http://bigfishadvent.blogspot.com/ http://www.clickaculturalconnection.com/
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Wednesday, March 18, 2009

NO ROADS BIGFISH KOKODA TRACK 2008

TEAM BIGFISH DOES THE KOKODA TRACK 2008!
What an amazing adventure was had by our fantatstic team on 17 trekkers and 20 local guides and porters. Guided by none other than No Roads own Pete Miller with brilliant local guides Javith & Terrance, Gazza and the BIGFISH team trekked this incredible 96km odyessy over 8 days in April 2008. A very special ANZAC Day dawn service was held at Bridgade Hill. It truly was an experience of a lifetime and one that remain in our memories and hearts forever.
Lest We Forget.
We were very lucky to have Paul Pfeiffer along as our cameraman to capture some brilliant images of the trip. Please enjoy some of the action from Day 1 below. All the other days can be viewed by following the links below. Also some of my happy snaps are here to look through as well. Any quesitons then contact me at bigfish@dgsundin.com.au





VIDEO LINKS TO THE REMAINING DAYS - Just click on each day