
Fundraising just got a whole lot more fun!
If your team raises the most funds in the 2023 Kokoda Challenge events across alll locations and all distances, you will win an adventure-packed, journey of a lifetime!
From Portland, Victoria all the way to Penola, South Australia, this pilgrimage route will include return flights from Brisbane to Victoria, accommodation, breakfast and lunch, PLUS you will win the title of having raised the most for the Kokoda Kids in our life-changing Kokoda Youth Programs!
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How do I win?

What are the details of the trek?
Day 1: Depart from Melbourne – 10.00am
Our official meeting point is the Mary MacKillop Centre in Melbourne. Our private bus will be departing from here at 10.00am. As a group we will make our way to Portland, which will be our first stop for the night.
Day 2: Start Pilgrimage: Portland to Cape Bridgewater – 20 kms
Breakfast is followed by a tour of Bayview College and All Saints Church, where Mary MacKillop and her sister, Annie, taught at the school. Transfer to trek start. For the first three days, we follow the Great South West Walk, established in the 1980’s and taking us through stunning country. We drive to Cape Nelson Lighthouse, where we start our trek, following coastal tracks that run along clifftops, affording spectacular views. With about 5kms to go we descend to bush tracks to the coastline and beach walk.

Day 3: Cape Bridgewater to Bridgewater lakes – 18kms
A short but be very enjoyable day. Continue walking along cliff tops, again enjoying views of stunning vistas, a seal colony and many turbines. Continue to Bridgewater Lakes, our finish point for the day. Our bus will pick us up and transfer us back to Cape Bridgewater for the second night of our stay at Seaview Lodge.
Day 4: Cape Bridgewater to Nelson – 23kms
This entire section is too long for one day, so we begin with our bus transfer to Lake Mombeong. Commence trek, walking about 7km through inland tracks around the lake, which will eventually take us out to the beach, for a 12km walk along hard, flat sand. The day finishes by walking an additional 3-4km into Nelson, our home for tonight.
Day 5: Nelson to Port Macdonnell – 30kms
A long day, and the first one off the Great South West Walk. To avoid walking along the busy Nelson -Mount Gambier Road to the border into South Australia, our bus takes us to the beach at Piccaninnie Ponds, which we will walk along for the rest of the day. The weather will be important today as we are on the beach– which means our walk could be just beautiful or quite challenging!

Day 6: Port Macdonnnell to Mount Gambier – 28kms
The roads today are very quiet and flat. Moving away from the coast we head north inland for around 3 hours to Mt Schank, a 100m high dormant volcano. Its cone-shaped form is a rare South Australian example of volcanic activity, that has been little affected by erosion. After a rest at the picnic ground here, we continue for our afternoon’s trek through to Mount Gambier.
Day 7: Mount Gambier to Bush Haven Cottage – 18kms
Free morning to rest, relax and look around this interesting town. The second most populated city in South Australia, Mount Gambier is known for its geographical features, particularly volcanic and limestone, and its Blue Lake, parks and gardens, caves and sinkholes. Afternoon trek of around four hours, past the Mount Gambier Regional Airport at Wandilo to Bush Haven Cottage at Mingbool.

Day 8: Bush Haven Cottage to Kalangadoo – 20kms
A relaxed start to the day allows us time to enjoy this rich agricultural district, specialising in potatoes and timber, apple orchards, beef cattle, sheep and dairy cattle. The village flourished with the construction of a narrow gauge railroad in 1887, languishing with the introduction of cars. Kalangadoo has a general store, a farm supply store, a pub, and a timber mill. The disused railway station houses a small museum.
Day 9: Kalangadoo to Penola – 28kms
After breakfast, our trek follows the old railway line for a good part of this day. Penola was the central location in the life of Mary MacKillop and Julian Tenison Woods. Here, the pair established St Joseph’s School, the first free Catholic school and a congregation of religious sisters, the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart. Otherwise known as the ‘Josephites’ or ‘Brown Joeys’, they continue to work with the poor and needy communities throughout the world today.
Day 10: Depart for home
For those so inclined, there is the option to attend 9:00am Mass at St Joseph’s, before visiting the Mary MacKillop Interpretive Centre.
We then board our bus and make our way back to Melbourne, stopping for lunch along the way. The drop off point will be the Mary MacKillop centre or pre arranged drop offs.
Meals (B/L)

Supporting our On The Right Track program (OTRT)
Getaway Trekking are the providers for our On The Right Track Program peak experience where kids are taken on the Packer's Ghost Trek in Far North Queensland!